ID | 184070 |
Title Proper | Radical democratic citizenship at work in an adverse economic environment |
Other Title Information | the case of workers’ co-operatives in Scotland |
Language | ENG |
Author | Zaunseder, Andreas |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | Worker co-operatives generally embrace democracy in their ownership and decision-making structure. However, the commitment to a flat organisational hierarchy, implementation of equal wage policy, and the pursuit of a strong ethical policy position these co-operatives on the highly principled side of the co-operative landscape in the UK. This paper draws on an ethnographic study of five such principled workers’ co-operatives operating in a most adverse economic context, the UK capitalist market economy. The study explores collective decision-making and the personal investment as two important political aspects. Workplace democracy and the personal are interlinked paradigms for political praxis – as practiced democracy, immanent critique of the hegemonic corporate way of organising work, as well as prefiguring a viable alternative. Taking the perspective of radical worker co-operatives, this article caters to an urgently needed conceptualisation of radical democratic citizenship at work. |
`In' analytical Note | Identities: Global Studies in Culture and Power Vol. 29, No.1; Feb 2022: p.88-107 |
Journal Source | Identities: Global Studies in Culture and Power 2022-02 29, 1 |
Key Words | Political ; Worker Co-operatives ; Radical Democratic Citizenship ; Workplace Democracy ; Prefiguration ; Economic Alternative |