This book investigates the return of workers self-management in recent decades as responses to recurring neoliberal crises. In particular, the book homes in on worker-recuperated enterprises (WREs), a promising form of workers self-organization whereby workers restart troubled, bankrupt, or shuttered companies as cooperatives or other forms of democratic workplace.
The book argues that WREs are prefigurative of new forms of work based on equality and sustainability. Framed by the concepts of autogestión, the labour commons, and prefigurative ethico-political practices, the book argues that WREs contribute to the construction of more directly democratic community economies. Drawing on a range of contemporary case studies from numerous countries in the Global South and North, as well as new theories of workers self-management, the book contributes a critical development, political economic, and class-struggle Marxist perspective to the re-emergent labour question within anti-systemic social movements, while theorizing the transformative nature of WREs for workers, work organizations, and communities.
Bringing a class-analysis back into current discourses and debates concerning democracy at work and alternatives to global capital, this book will be of interest to researchers across the fields of development studies, labour studies, political economy, sociology of development, sociology of work, and political science.
Introduction: Recuperating Workplaces and Community Spaces Part
1.
Setting the Conceptual Stage: Recuperating Productive Life, Democratizing
Work
1. Class Still Matters: Autogestión, Living Labour, the Moral Economy of
Work, and the Labour Commons
2. A Conceptual Review: Workers
Self-Management, Workers Control, and Autogestión
3. A Historical
Perspective: Key Debates in Autogestión Part
2. Mapping the Experiences of
Worker-Recuperated Enterprises in Latin America
4. Occupy, Resist, Produce:
Argentinas Worker-Recuperated Enterprises Set the Stage
5. Between the
Social and Solidarity Economy and the State: Worker-Recuperated Enterprises
in Brazil and Uruguay
6. Cooperatives, Co-Management, and Workers Councils:
Worker-Recuperated Enterprises in Venezuela Part
3. Mapping the Experiences
of Worker-Recuperated Enterprises in Europe and the Rest of the World
7.
Labour-Conflict Conversions Amid Wider Cooperative Movements:
Worker-Recuperated Enterprises in Italy and France
8. Workers Responses to
Rising Austerity and Social Challenges: Worker-Recuperated Enterprises in the
Rest of Europe
9. Inklings of a Larger Global Movement: Worker-Recuperated
Enterprises in the Rest of the World Part
4. Worker-Recuperated Enterprises
as Labour Commons: Contradictions and Possibilities
10. Recuperating the
Commons
11. Commonalities in the Lived Experiences of Worker-Recuperated
Enterprises
12. The Dual Realities of Worker-Recuperated Enterprises
13.
Worker-Recuperated Enterprises and Workplace Democracy as Labour Commons
Dario Azzellini, PhD in Political Science and in Sociology, is Visiting Research Fellow at the ILR School, Cornell University, USA. Azzellinis over 20 books, 11 films, and more than 100 journal articles and book chapters focus on labour, self-management, sustainability and just transition, social transformation, and global political economy, many of which have been translated into various languages. He is also the founder of the multilingual website workerscontrol.net. Follow his work at www.azzellini.net
Marcelo Vieta, PhD in Social and Political Thought, is Associate Professor and Chair of the Department of Leadership, Higher and Adult Education and co-director of the Centre for Learning, Social Economy and Work at the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education of the University of Toronto, Canada. He has published award-winning books and dozens of articles and book chapters on workers self-management, economic democracy, cooperativism, and the social and solidarity economy. Follow his work at www.vieta.ca