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This open access book investigates how trade unions representing
different social classes use YouTube videos for renewal purposes.
Information and communication technology has undoubtedly offered
new opportunities for social movements, but while research suggests
that these new means of communication can be used for trade union
revitalization, few studies have examined what unions actually do
on social media. By analysing more than 4500 videos that have been
uploaded by Swedish trade unions, Jansson and Uba explore how
unions use YouTube to address issues such as recruiting new
members, improving internal democracy, promoting political
campaigns and constructing (new) self-images. The results
demonstrate that trade unions representing a range of social
classes use different revitalization strategies via YouTube. This
research will be of use to students and scholars researching
European politics and political participation, trade unionism and
labour movements in the digital age.
This open access book investigates how trade unions representing
different social classes use YouTube videos for renewal purposes.
Information and communication technology has undoubtedly offered
new opportunities for social movements, but while research suggests
that these new means of communication can be used for trade union
revitalization, few studies have examined what unions actually do
on social media. By analysing more than 4500 videos that have been
uploaded by Swedish trade unions, Jansson and Uba explore how
unions use YouTube to address issues such as recruiting new
members, improving internal democracy, promoting political
campaigns and constructing (new) self-images. The results
demonstrate that trade unions representing a range of social
classes use different revitalization strategies via YouTube. This
research will be of use to students and scholars researching
European politics and political participation, trade unionism and
labour movements in the digital age.
Crafting the Movement presents an explanation of why the Swedish
working class so unanimously adopted reformism during the interwar
period. Jenny Jansson discusses the precarious time for the labor
movement after the Russian Revolution in 1917 that sparked a trend
towards radicalization among labor organizations and communist
organizations throughout Europe and caused an identity crisis in
class organizations. She reveals that the leadership of the Trade
Union Confederation (LO) was well aware of the identity problems
that the left-wing factions had created for the reformist unions.
Crafting the Movement explains how this led labor movement leaders
towards a re-formulation of the notion of the worker by
constructing an organizational identity that downplayed class
struggle and embraced discipline, peaceful solutions to labor
market problems, and cooperation with the employers. As Jansson
shows, study activities arranged by the Workers' Educational
Association became the main tool of the Trade Union Confederation's
identity policy in the 1920s and 1930s and its successful outcome
paved the way for the well-known "Swedish Model." Thanks to
generous funding from Uppsala University, the ebook editions of
this book are available as Open Access volumes from Cornell Open
(cornellpress.cornell.edu/cornell-open) and other Open Access
repositories.
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