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From Partnership to Resistance: Unions and Organisational Learning at Ericsson Infocom

Author

Summary, in English

In recognising that much mainstream literature on organisational learning is overwhelmingly managerial, this paper explores learning as an appropriate framework for studying organisations at the level of sub-systems or subcultures. It is thus argued that there is an interesting agenda to be pursued by the critical researcher on seeing organisational learning as a means of analysing both co-operation and conflict over the labour process from a bottom-up perspective. In practical terms, in highly organised contexts with established collective bargaining, this means study of collective learning in workplace trade union organisations. The setting of Ericsson Infocom at Norrköping, Sweden, is selected for empirical study. An adaptation of Dixon’s model of experiential organisational learning (1994) of the local unions identifies two distinct modes of learning, each reflecting different post-Fordist strategies for managing the labour process: initially multiskilled teamworking and subsequently outsourcing. The former mode reflects the actions and discourse of negotiated partnership with the employer, whilst the latter reflects the actions and discourse of resistance.

Publishing year

2000

Language

English

Pages

353-373

Publication/Series

Management Learning

Volume

31

Issue

3

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Topic

  • Business Administration

Keywords

  • organizational learning
  • learning processes
  • workplace unions
  • work organization
  • partnership
  • resistance
  • discourse

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 1350-5076