2012
DOI: 10.1177/0022185612449132
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The Unionization of Part-time Workers in Japan

Abstract: This article examines the two differing types of union strategy to organize part-time workers in Japan. One is a homogeneous strategy; the other, a heterogeneous strategy. Based on in-depth interviews with five enterprise labour unions, it was found that if both management and the union support part-time workers' up-skilling, active involvement and a sense of unity with regular workers for enhancing labour productivity, they tend to strategically choose the homogeneous strategy, which provides equal treatment … Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Likewise, in Washington, DC, taxi drivers, who are independent contractors, have turned to the Teamsters union as a way to protect their interests (Clark 2013). Meanwhile, in Japan unions have been engaged in seeking to organize part-time workers (Oh 2012). In other instances, workers have turned to corporate codes of labour practice, which, though they have limitations, can nonetheless be effective in certain circumstances (Barrientos 2008) because they represent companies' public statements of intent, and their failure to live up to these can provide something around which workers and their supporters can rally so as to bring pressure to bear on employers.…”
Section: Implications For the Futurementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Likewise, in Washington, DC, taxi drivers, who are independent contractors, have turned to the Teamsters union as a way to protect their interests (Clark 2013). Meanwhile, in Japan unions have been engaged in seeking to organize part-time workers (Oh 2012). In other instances, workers have turned to corporate codes of labour practice, which, though they have limitations, can nonetheless be effective in certain circumstances (Barrientos 2008) because they represent companies' public statements of intent, and their failure to live up to these can provide something around which workers and their supporters can rally so as to bring pressure to bear on employers.…”
Section: Implications For the Futurementioning
confidence: 99%
“…The development of Japanese community unions has been the object of several studies in the Japanese and English language literature (Oh, 2012a(Oh, , 2012b(Oh, , 2012c. Oftentimes, the focus of enquiry has been put on comparative investigations of Japanese grassroots-level forms of labour activism with similar developments in other regional contexts (Suzuki, 2008(Suzuki, , 2012Takasu, 2012) or on the specificities of particular community unions in Japan (Royle & Urano, 2012;Urano & Stewart, 2009).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%