CESR Working Papers
ESRC Project: ‘The Unorganised Worker: Routes to Support, Views on Representation’, The Survey of Unrepresented Workers.
Feb 2003 – Oct 2006
This project explored the experience of problems at work and sources of support and advice of non-unionised workers in Britain. It explored‘concerns’ at work – what these were, how they were perceived, whether any action was taken or not - and wider issues of individual employment rights and their enforcement. Non-unionised workers’ use of union help-lines, statutory bodies such as Acas and the Employment Tribunal system, various support and advice agencies, such as Citizens Advice Bureau and law centres, and wider social networks were examined. The research involved both a telephone survey of 500 workers and qualitative interviews of a smaller number accessed through the survey respondents, the Citizens Advice Bureaux and other informal channels. Wider attitudes towards individual and collective representation and broader social engagement were also explored.
WP1:
Technical and methodology summary (with IFF).
WP2: Review of theoretical and
methodological issues
WP3: Mapping the problems
WP4: Examining the problems of unrepresented
workers in Britain
WP5: What do unrepresented workers do about
problems at work?
WP6: Problems at work and routes to
resolution with the Citizens Advice Bureau
WP7: Collectivism and views on trade unions
among unrepresented workers with problems at work
WP11: Vulnerable workers and problems at
work: Who experiences problems at work, what problems do they
experience, what do they do about them and what happens as a
result? (with Andy Charlwood)
WP13: Varieties of collectivism among
Britain’s low-paid unorganised workers with problems at work
WP8: Where do organisations end and labour
markets begin?
Abstract: The division of labour between labour economists and organisation theorists results in there being little or no (epistemic) connection between the disciplines of labour economics and organization theory, and little or no recognition of the (ontic) connection between the phenomena of labour markets and organizations. This paper transcends disciplinary boundaries to develop connections between organizations, especially business organisations, and labour markets.
WP9: Institutions and social structures:
Some clarifications
Abstract: The objective of this paper is to continue the important task of clarifying two terms that are central to a great deal of social science, but often mired in confusion, namely, ‘institutions’ and ‘social structures’. The opening part of the paper uses recent insights in contemporary sociological and (Institutional) economic theory to explore the similarities between social structures and institutions, especially in the relation between them as a couple, and human agents.
WP12: A trans-disciplinary (proto) model of
labour markets
Abstract: Building upon trans-disciplinary insights from the ‘socio-economics of labour markets’ tradition and drawing upon critical realist meta-theory, this paper outlines a trans-disciplinary (proto ) model of labour markets as an alternative to the orthodox model.
Graham Taylor & Andy Mathers
WP10:
Organising unions, organising communities? Trades union councils
and community union politics in England and Wales
Abstract: The division of labour between labour economists
and organisation theorists results in there being little or no
(epistemic) connection between the disciplines of labour economics
and organization theory, and little or no
recognition of the (ontic) connection between the phenomena
of labour markets and organizations. This paper transcends
disciplinary boundaries to develop connections between
organizations, especially business organisations, and labour
markets.
Higher Education European Social Fund and Acas funded Research project: ‘The Experience of Ethnic Minority Workers in the Hotel and Catering Industry: Routes to Support and Advice on Workplace Problems’
Working Paper 1: The Experience of Ethnic Minority Workers in the Hotel and Catering Industry: Routes to Support and Advice on Workplace Problems: A Review of the Issues (Tessa Wright and Anna Pollert).
ESRU Working Papers:
A list of archived ESRU Working Papers is available.
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Contact:
CESR
Bristol Business School
University of the West of England
Frenchay Campus
Coldharbour Lane
Bristol
BS16 1QY
Tel +44 (0) 117 328 3435
Email: stella.warren@uwe.ac.uk












Page last updated 19 September 2011