The Challenge to Workplace Unionism in the Royal Mail
- 1 May 1993
- journal article
- Published by Emerald Publishing in Employee Relations
- Vol. 15 (5) , 3-25
- https://doi.org/10.1108/01425459310048518
Abstract
While remaining in the public sector, the British Post Office has undergone massive changes in terms of its general orientation and structure over the last decade, with major implications for workplace management‐labour relations and shopfloor trade union organization. The most recent phase of restructuring within the core Royal Mail section of the Post Office has been accompanied by an assertive managerial strategy aimed at tackling the strong workplace union levels of control and autonomy that have developed in many city‐based sorting offices. Provides evidence from empirical case study research into one of the largest and most union‐militant Royal Mail sorting offices in the country based in central Liverpool. After outlining the strengths and weaknesses of workplace unionism during the mid‐1980s to the late 1980s, focuses on how the Liverpool UCW leadership have attempted to respond to Royal Mail′s 1992 restructuring initiative and HRM practices. Suggests that, notwithstanding new and complex dilemmas, workplace unionism within the Royal Mail remains relatively resilient.Keywords
This publication has 7 references indexed in Scilit:
- Bargaining PowerPublished by Oxford University Press (OUP) ,1992
- THE POLITICS AND COMPLEXITY OF TRADE UNION RESPONSES TO NEW MANAGEMENT PRACTICESHuman Resource Management Journal, 1992
- Contemporary British Industrial RelationsPublished by Springer Nature ,1992
- The Contours of Local Trade Unionism in a Period of RestructuringPublished by Springer Nature ,1990
- The post office: Strategy of a programme for changePublic Money and Management, 1988
- THE PEOPLE‐MANAGEMENT DIMENSION IN CURRENT PROGRAMMES OF ORGANISATIONAL CHANGEEmployee Relations, 1988
- Strikes on Merseyside: A Regional Analysis*Industrial Relations Journal, 1986