“…It contributes to the theoretical foundations of EWC research by providing an analytical toolkit for explaining patterns and outcome of cross‐border employee representation that involves actors in a multilevel framework. By doing so, the study echoes recent approaches in transnational industrial relations and governance to take the multilevel perspective more serious (Keune and Marginson, ; Köhler and Gonzáles Begega, ) or to acknowledge the web of transnational institutions that affects the field of global employment relations (Dehnen and Pries, ). Furthermore, it builds on recent EWC research that highlights the role of informal relations, networks or identity (Whittall et al ., ; Martínez Lucio, ; Pulignano, ), and on concepts that emphasise the role of agency in constructing or disrupting labour institutions (Pernicka and Glassner, ).…”