“…Zack (1962) claims that industrial relations in African studies are an area of prime importance and much dynamism, but that they are at the same time further removed from the public eye than any other field. In the past, a number of researchers studied employment relations in Africa (see Buhlungu et al, 2008;Etukudo, 1995;Fashoyin and Matanmi, 1996;Goodman, 1969;Hagglund, 1994) and African countries, such as Mozambique (Dibben, 2010;Dibben and Nadin, 2011;Webster et al, 2006a;Webster et al, 2006b), Ghana (Gray, 1980), Kenya (Henley, 1978), Tanzania (Fischer, 2013) Swaziland (Simelane, 2008), Nigeria (Fajana, 2008), Zambia (Fashoyin, 2008), and Namibia (Klerck, 2008). In particular, a considerable body of literature has investigated employment relations and unions in South Africa (see Albertyn and Rycroft, 1995;Anstey, 1993;Buhlungu, 2009;Butcher and Rouse, 2001;Dibben et al, 2012;Hirschsohn, 1998Hirschsohn, , 2007Maller, 1994;Von Holdt, 2002;Von Holdt and Webster, 2008;Wood, 2002;Wood and Dibben, 2008;Wood and Glaister, 2008).…”