Trade Unions in Transformation 4.0 - Session 3

Digital Facelift: Are Tech Workers the New Face of the Global Labour Movement?


4 November 2020
4 - 5:30 PM Berlin time, Online

REGISTER NOW!


The digital transformation, long thought to adversely affect only low-skilled workers, has taken on a more ambiguous role in recent years: On the one hand, the rapid development of information and communication technology and its integration into ever more industries has been the driving force for an almost exponential growth of the sector. On the other hand, the global digital transformation as well as the liberalization of global labour markets have led to the outsourcing of labour to less protected and often underpaid contractors. Even leading ICT companies have started to downsize to maintain their competitiveness.

As a result, the sector has witnessed an unseen unionisation trend that has the potential to profoundly alter the face of the global labour movement. Mass layoff and the improvement of health and safety conditions at the workplace are the main drivers of this trend. But even beyond “bread and butter” issues, tech workers have started to rally around identity issues as well and have mobilised around broader social issues, such as climate change, social surveillance or structural racism, giving rise to talk about a “Tech Revolt” in the sector.

This online debate—a joint FES and UNI Global Union event and the 3rd session of the ongoing “Trade Unions in Transformation 4.0” debate series—engages with these recent and unprecedented unionizing trends among ICT employees and tech workers. Based on evidence from the TUiT 4.0 project as well as case studies from Israel, Romania and the bay area in the United States, we explore why and by which means tech workers, contrary to common assumptions, have started to organize their interest; how changes in the IT sector have become an opportunity for trade unions to reestablish their relevance in the new labor markets; and how the integration of socially conscious tech workers into traditional trade unions may have the potential to vitalise organized labour and promotes engagement with broader transformation processes.

The event will be translated simultaneously in English/French/Hebrew/Portuguese/Spanish and streamed live at: www.fes.de/lnk/transform.

To join us for the discussion please register with the link provided below.

Introduction and overview:

  • Jannis Grimm & Anja Bodenmüller-Raeder, FES

Speakers:

  • Karri Lybeck, Senior Coordinator, UNI Global Union – Information, Communications, Technology, and Services (ICTS)
  • Ben Fisher, Author of the FES Study “Unlikely unionists: Organised labour in the Israeli ICT sector”, accessible here
  • Claudia Hoarcă, Representative of Sindicatul IT Timisoara Romania (SITT)

Moderators: Jannis Grimm & Anja Bodenmüller-Raeder, FES

We look forward to welcoming you! Please register at: https://www.fes.de/veranstaltungen/?Veranummer=250448 by Monday, 2 November 2020. After the registration deadline you will receive a dial-in link and an email with the corresponding password. Please note that this combination is personalized and should thus be kept confidential.

 

 
 

 
 

Coming up this November:

Trade Union 4.0 shapes Industry 4.0: How metal workers’ unions in Brazil and Germany redefine interest representation and broaden their scope of action.

Riders on the storm: How emerging workers organisations and established trade unions in Argentina, Indonesia, Korea, Belgium, Netherlands and Uganda attempt to reign in the emerging platform economy in transport.

New apps on the block: How unions become innovators in organizing, service delivery and tackling market players;

If you require more information or would no longer like to receive invitations to this project’s activities, please contact UnionsTransform@fes.de.

 
 


 

For more background information on Trade Unions in Transformation, please visit our → website, our → trailer and the → online course. There, you will also find more information about the Power Resources Approach, a short video of which is → here.

 

 

Data protection notice for FES participants/Unsubscribe:

This online debate will be hosted through the online video communications platform ZOOM, a service provided by ZOOM Video Communications, Inc., a company based in the United States of America. On the basis of a bilateral contract, approved by the European Commission, the Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung and ZOOM have agreed that ZOOM will limit itself exclusively to the collection and processing of the data required for hosting the online debate. For further details, please visit the "ZOOM Global Data Processing Addendum", which you can access → here

If you no longer wish to receive invitations or newsletters, please send us an e-mail without text to unsubscribe@fes.de.

 

About FES

The Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung (FES) is the oldest political foundation in Germany with a rich tradition in social democracy dating back to its foundation in 1925. The foundation owes its formation and its mission to the political legacy of its namesake Friedrich Ebert, the first democratically elected German President.

The work of our political foundation focuses on the core ideas and values of social democracy – freedom, justice and solidarity. This connects us to social democracy and free trade unions. As a non-profit institution, we organise our work autonomously and independently.

 
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