Authors
Randy Hodson, Sandy Welsh, Sabine Rieble, Cheryl Sorenson Jamison, Sean Creighton
Publication date
1993/6/1
Journal
American Sociological Review
Pages
398-416
Publisher
American Sociological Association
Description
Solidarity is workers' chief protection against abusive management as well as a mediating factor against the ravages of meaningless work. Researchers interested in workers' well-being have suggested that increased worker autonomy and participation in the labor process may undermine worker solidarity. Available answers to this question have been difficult to confirm because of the nature of the data required. Ethnographic methods are able to probe deeply inside a workplace to ascertain levels of worker solidarity, autonomy, and participation. However, the uniqueness of each ethnographic account restricts the testing of hypotheses about worker solidarity across a variety of contexts. We analyze English language ethnographic case studies of specific workplaces to systematically explore hypotheses about worker autonomy, participation, and solidarity. We find that autonomy has no effect on worker solidarity and …
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