Skickas torsdag 19/3. Fri frakt för medlemmar vid köp för minst 249 kr.
In Co-operative Struggles, Denise Kasparian expands the theoretical horizons regarding labour unrest by proposing new categories to make visible and conceptualize conflicts in the new worker co-operativism of the twenty-first century.After the depletion of neoliberal reforms at the dawn of the twenty-first century in Argentina, co-operativism gained momentum, mainly due to the recuperation of enterprises by their workers and state promotion of co-operatives through social policies. These new co-operatives became actors not just in production but in social struggle. Their peculiarity lies in the fact that they shape a socio-productive form not structured by wage relations: workers are at the same time owners of the firms. Why, how, and by what cleavages and groupings do these co-operative workers without bosses come into conflict?
Denise Kasparian is Assistant Professor at the University of Buenos Aires and Researcher at the National Scientific and Technical Research Council. She has published books and articles on conflict and social change in co-operatives.
Foreword The Democratisation of ConflictAcknowledgementsList of Figures, Tables and ImagesIntroduction1 The Question of Work Conflicts in New Co-operatives2 Dimensions of New Social Conflicts in Co-operative Socio-productive Contexts3 The Challenge of Comparing Paradigmatic but Non-equivalent Experiences: Studying a Whole That Acts as a Whole4 The Structure of the Book1 Co-operatives ‘Made in Argentina’ The Process of Enterprise Recuperation by Their Workers1 The Socio-genesis of the Processes of Enterprise Recuperation1.1 When Worker Resistance Becomes an Offensive Movement1.2 The Widespread Crisis of 2001–2002, or Adding Fuel to the Fire1.3 The Movement of the Flames2 The Evolution of Enterprise Recuperation Processes2.1 The Fuel of the Growing Economy Keeps the Flames of Production Moving2.2 The Moral Economy of Work in the Continued Presence of Enterprise Recuperations2.3 “Argentina Is One Big, Recuperated Factory”: Public Policies for Recuperated Enterprises2.4 The Movement’s Fragmentation, Co-operative Convergence and Union Rapprochement2 Incubated Co-operatives Co-operative Formation under the Argentina Works Programme1 Social Schemes with Work Requirement: From Workfare to the Argentina Works Programme2 The Mediation of Unemployed Workers’ Organisations: Civil Associations, Productive Units and Co-operatives3 The Dual Logic of the Argentina Works Programme’s Socio-genesis: Creating Jobs and Co-ordinating Local Politics4 Induced Co-operatives? The Struggle of Unemployed Workers’ Organisations4.1 The Evolution of the Argentina Works Programme4.2 The Intensity and Dynamics of Contentious Action4.3 The Demands and Forms of Contentious Action3 Keeping and Having a Job A Milestone in Constitutive Conflicts1 ‘Occupy, Resist, Produce’ … and Have!2 From ‘Induction’ to the ‘Co-operative without Brokers’3 A Comparative Lens on Constitutive Conflicts4 The Recuperated Enterprise and Social Power in Production1 Recuperators, Activists and the ‘Born and Bred’2 Property Relations: Social Possession and Differential Appropriation of the Fruits of Labour3 The Logic of Production and the Issue of Sustainability in Recuperated Enterprises4 The Political Dimension: Between Self-management and Delegation5 Social Groupings and Potential Antagonisms: Opportunity Hoarding, Enterprise Projects and Work Generations5 The Argentina Works Co-operative and State Power in Production1 The Labour and Socio-spatial Precarity of Argentina Works Programme Workers2 Property Relations: Social Possession and Autonomy3 The Logic of Production: Between Subsistence and Political Accumulation4 The Political Dimension: State Power and Co-management5 Social Groupings and Potential Antagonisms: State Officials, Co-operative Members and Activists6 The Production of Co-operative Conflict1 Board Removals: Conflicts over the Running and Expansion of the Productive Process2 Regulations, Sanctions and Exclusions: From ‘Founder Members’ to ‘ Founderer Members’3 “We Fought over the River Module”: The Conflict over Autonomous Work4 Between Subsistence Consumption and Political Accumulation in the Social Organisation5 A Comparative Lens7 Conclusions1 The New Twenty-First-Century Co-Operativism and Its Struggles Around Work2 What Patterns of Conflicts are There without Bosses? Towards a Theory of Unrest in Worker Co-operatives3 From Prelude to Present: A Toolbox for New Research QuestionsBibliographyIndex