The Creation Of The E-Union

THE CREATION OF THE E-UNION:
THE USE OF ICT BY BRITISH UNIONS

Text of a presentation made to
an Internet Economy Conference at the Centre for Economic Performance
at the London School of Economics on 7 November 2000
and at a New Economy Conference organised by the Deutsche Postgewerkschaft
in Berlin on 1 February 2001 [click here]
- last modified on 2 February 2002


Roger speaking in Berlin

Contents

  • Introduction
  • Internal Communications & Transactions
  • External Communications & Transactions
  • Membership Activities
  • Conference Organisation
  • The Bargaining Process
  • Education & Training
  • International Work
  • The "int.unity" Project
  • Obstacles To The E-Union
  • Why The E-Union Will Happen
  • Conclusion
  • Further Reading

  • INTRODUCTION

    My starting point for this presentation is a quote from “Business@The Speed Of Thought”, the 1999 book written by the Microsoft Chief Executive Bill Gates [for review click here]:

    “Here on the edge of the 21st century, a fundamental new rule of business is that the Internet changes everything”.
    From this proposition, I draw two conclusions for the trade union movement. First, trade unions – like all other bodies in our society – have to re-invent themselves as e-organisations. This means that trade unions have not simply to use computers to assist certain activities, but to put the Internet at the centre of their purpose and strategy. Second, this re-invention will affect everything that trade unions do and ought to do. This means that information and communications technologies (ICT) will influence profoundly all current union activities and, even more so, all future activities if unions are to survive and prosper.

    The structure of this presentation is to look at seven strands of trade union activity and, in each case, examine how ICT can be used to benefit trade unions and to give some specific examples of relevant activity by British trade unions, including my own union the Communication Workers Union (CWU).

    INTERNAL COMMUNICATIONS AND TRANSACTIONS

    First, let me look at how ICT will affect internal communications and transactions:

    A good example of the use of ICT for internal union purposes is the experience of the CWU Research Department which I head. All 12 members of the Department can access electronically all the major pieces of work of each of the six researchers. One of the Department’s Information Managers Jane Taylor has created a Departmental intranet which brings together a whole range of key documents and data from a wide variety of sources which can assist us in our work. Some members of the Department are able to access all this material – plus their e-mail – from home.

    EXTERNAL COMMUNICATIONS AND TRANSACTIONS

    Second, let me consider the impact on external communications and transactions:

    MEMBERSHIP ACTIVITIES

    Third, I want to look at how information technologies can shape those activities which revolve around organising, recruiting and servicing individual members which, after all, is the heart of trade union activity:

    CONFERENCE ORGANISATION

    Fourth, these technologies can have a major impact on the nature of trade union conferences:

    THE BARGAINING PROCESS

    In effect, the ‘bread and butter’ activity of most unions is the bargaining process whereby, usually each year, pay and other conditions are negotiated between union and management. Therefore, fifthly, I want to look at how ICT can impact on the bargaining process:

    EDUCATION AND TRAINING

    Sixthly, ICT technologies are ready-made for application to the education and training functions of trade unions:

    One union which has already done more than some in this direction is the Graphical, Paper and Media Union (GPMU)[click here]. On its web site, one can gain access to the union’s training and development handbook and book electronically for attendance on courses. The TUC itself now provides some courses through LearnOnline distance learning via the Internet [click here].

    INTERNATIONAL WORK

    The seventh and final union area of activity which I will look at in terms of use of ICT technologies is international work. As companies and economies become more global, this work becomes more and more central to the domestic agenda of an increasing number of trade unions:

    THE "INT.UNITY" PROJECT

    After a conception period of some three years, it was December 2001 when the European Commission finally confirmed that an exciting international trade union IT project had been accepted for EU funding. At this stage, the funding source secured came under Article 6 of the European Social Fund. Throughout the successive bids, the project name and content have both evolved and the project is now called "int.unity" and is more focussed.

    There are three trade union partners to the project:

    The two other partners are German institutions:

    The five partners to the project will establish a virtual network to develop three particular activities:

    1. There will be a BSCW system (Basic Support for Co-operative Work) to implement, test, and optimise an Internet-based technical platform. This will make it possible for the project teams of the participating organisations, using heterogeneous hardware and software, to communicate and co-operate from various European locations environments and across the borders of countries and organisations in a simple, user-friendly and safe way. Use will be made not only of fundamental applications for electronic communications (such as e-mail and file transfer), but also ambitious variations of asynchronous and synchronous telecommunication and co-operation such as joint filing, administration and handling of information (documents and data). With these objectives as the background, \"int.unity\" sees itself as a stage in the course towards forming virtual communities of geographically distributed trade union players, teams and institutions.

    2. From the perspective of trade union users, the project will implement, test, evaluate and optimise a Language Technology that is adequate for the target group and which makes it possible for the participating organisations to communicate and work within the framework of the project in their own native language. Users will be able to create messages, information and documents in their own respective language, which are then automatically translated into the other respective language - with the assistance of a "human evaluator" - in such a way that they are as error-free as possible and easily comprehended. Among other activities the German/English dictionaries will be successively expanded by the specialised trade union terminology with emphasis laid on the context of the terms relevant to the "Internet Economy". Mutual standards will be worked out for writing the source texts and the user-friendliness of the translation software will be improved.

    3. The intention will be to link the two technological lines of development with one another and to integrate the Language Technology described in item 2 into the Internet platform described in item 1. This would expand the BSCW by an important component and eliminate a decisive bottleneck - the mutual language problems - in the (electronic) co-operation of the "int.unity" players. From a technical perspective, the outcome of "int.unity" therefore aims at the development of an innovative tool for geographically distributed multilingual tele co-operation of trade union organisations and other trans-national institutions of the social partners.

    As well as these three broad based streams of activity, there will be three more thematic fields of work. Each of these three fields will be assigned to one particular trade union partner to take the lead but, in each case, each of the three trade union partners will nominate three colleagues to form a virtual team.

    The three themes are as follows:

    1. Trade unions and the Internet - options for the establishment of the "E-Union"
      - assigned to the CWU
      Employee representatives must also increasingly develop the skills required to take advantage of the diverse opportunities that the Internet offers for improving their work. The options of an "E-Union" range from setting up electronic archives and Intranets to creating web sites and portals, to virtual conferences, network-supported services and e-learning programmes, all the way to using the Internet for organising new members, for supporting campaigns and formulating demands and objectives through electronic surveys and elections. Many trade unions - including the CWU, ver.di and UNI Europa - are presently in an experimental stage where they are testing the potential of the Internet as well as evaluating the obstacles to setting up an "E-Union".

    2. Trade unions and the "new economy" - opportunities and problems in interest representation
      - assigned to ver.di
      The transition to a "new economy" is linked with the formation of new forms of work and co-operation, new companies and new types of employment with different mentalities, interests and problems. In this sector, the trade unions have not yet made sufficient headway, but are presently making diverse efforts to make to represent the interests of employees in the "new economy". These efforts include, for example, collective provisions for tele-work, consulting and supporting freelancers, setting up union and works council structures in start-up companies, or asserting the protective and access rights of "online" employees.

    3. Trade unions and European works councils - concepts for supporting the work of trans-national interest representatives
      - assigned to UNI
      In the organisational area of ver.di and CWU - such as in the large corporations in the telecommunications, postal and logistics sector - the establishment of European works councils is being prepared and planned with the participation of UNI Europa in accordance with Directive 94/45/EC. The unions are faced with the task here of developing concepts for supporting and consulting these bodies and of improving their ability to co-operate trans-nationally and even across the borders of individual international sector secretariats.

    OBSTACLES TO THE E-UNION

    What are the obstacles to this kind of e-Union? Obviously, there will be many obstacles to the kind of radical transformation which I have described in this presentation. Some of the main ones will be the following :

    An example of the kind of culture I am describing can be found on the home page of one of our largest unions. There is no information at all on this page, but instead a message of welcome from the General Secretary referring to the founding of the union in the 1920s - not exactly a projection of modernity.

    WHY THE E-UNION WILL HAPPEN

    Notwithstanding the obstacles that will be faced, the e-union will happen, in some instances sooner than others and more easily that others. Some of the compelling reasons that will bring it about include the following :

    CONCLUSION

    I want to make it very clear that none of the proposals in this pamphlet is intended to obviate the need for unions to continue to use traditional, face-to-face methods of organising and motivating their members. My appeal is for unions to become more flexible, more inventive, and frankly more modern in how we organise and serve each of our members.

    The agenda which I have set out may seem formidable, even intimidating. However, I have sought to demonstrate that almost every item on that agenda is already in use somewhere – the challenge is to do it all in a systematic, pro-active way.

    All unions are already in competition with employers and others to communicate a message and an image and the use of ICT can even up that contest. Indeed, as ICT technologies blur the divisions between industries and jobs, increasingly unions will be in competition with each other for members and services.

    In a few years time, much of what I have described will seem commonplace and we will wonder why it took us so long to adopt these technologies and techniques. The time is now and the prize is great.

    FURTHER READING

    \\\"Negotiating The Net: A Guide For Trade Unionists\\\" by Labour Research Department (August 1998)
    \\\"How The Internet Empowers, Democratizes And Internationalizes Unions\\\" by Eric Lee click here
    “The Labour Movement and the Internet: The New Internationalism”, Eric Lee click here
    \\\"The Internet Belongs To Everyone\\\" by Eric Lee click here
    Web site of TUC Conference on \\\"Unions And The Internet\\\" click here
    A really good resource for trade unionists wishing to start or develop a Web site is run by Union Network International click here

    ROGER DARLINGTON

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