UID:
almahu_9948683201802882
Format:
1 online resource (232 p.)
,
7 ill.
Edition:
1st, New ed.
ISBN:
9781800790681
Series Statement:
Trade Unions. Past, Present and Future 00
Content:
This book describes and analyses the 2003 British Airways (BA) Customer Service Agents’ (CSA) 24-hour unofficial strike. It examines the lead up to the dispute, in which negotiations failed to reach an agreement over the launch of BA’s Automatic Time Recording and Integrated Airport Resource Management systems, before focusing on the dispute itself and its eventual resolution. Central to the book is the question: why did a group of union members, the majority of whom were young women, become so incensed at an imposed change to their working practices that they took unofficial strike action? This they did in the knowledge that they could all have been legally dismissed. In analysing the strike, the book explores why BA’s management imposed such a controversial change to working practices on the company’s busiest weekend of the year. A decision which, allegedly, cost the company two-hundred-million pounds, tarnished its reputation, and saw numerous senior managers lose their jobs. How and why the CSAs’ three trade unions (the GMB Union, the Transport and General Workers Union and Amicus) reacted in such different ways to the unofficial strike, and then behaved so differently in the subsequent negotiations, is also central to this study.
Note:
CONTENTS: Introduction and précis of the dispute – The methodological approach – Different theoretical approaches to the study of strikes – The causes of the 18 July 2003 strike – The 18–19 July 2003 unofficial strike – The 21–30 July 2003 negotiations – The August 2003–November 2018 negotiations – Summary, findings and conclusions.
Additional Edition:
ISBN 9781800790599
Language:
English
URL:
https://www.peterlang.com/view/product/88632?format=EPDF
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