
LabourStart
In the latest UnionDues podcast episode, we look at the phenomenon that is LaborStart. With networks in over 20 countries, and working in nearly 30 different languages, LaborStart has been campaigning with unions and their members for over 25 years. There really is nothing quite like it, so it was a treat to sit down with its founder and guiding light Eric Lee, to understand where LaborStart has come from, what it does and how it works.
We need to go back to 1996 and Eric’s book exploring the possibilities for using the internet for trade union solidarity activity. What was imaginative – fanciful even- then is commonplace today. As Eric says, a list of union websites in the mid 1990s would fill less than half a page, now it is almost infinite.
LaborStart works thanks to a network of roughly 1000 contributors who channel information up to linked LaborStart sites in each country or in different languages. But the organisation doesn’t create or propagate policy. It is a platform for those in dispute or struggle, seeking and needing support.
From Kyrgyzstan to Instanbul…..
Eric told me about some of LaborStart’s campaigning work, which ranges from union recognition to saving the lives of imprisoned or otherwise at risk trade unionists in far flung or hostile environments – including rolling back repressive anti-union proposals in Kyrgyzstan (10 points if you can point to it on a globe), and working with the CUPE union to get Cihan Erdal out of jail, at least in the short term, in Turkey.
But LaborStart is not without its challenges. Despite making in-roads into parts of the far East, it remains predominantly rooted in the more developed global North and the English speaking nations within that. There is a sensibly opportunist approach taken to sustaining and expanding LaborStart’s global footprint based on seeking out correspondents and interns with unique linguistic skills – this has led, for example to the first campaigns in Yoruba (with 50 million having this as their mother tongue).
Email lists
Criticism is also made of a reliance on email lists as the principal campaign tool. Whilst acknowledging that your medium must match that of the population you’re working in (and I hadn’t realised that, apparently, FB has supplanted emails in the Philippines, for instance), Eric mounts a passionate defence of the humble email pointing out that response rates are much better than for social media channels, and that this method of communication has survived and spread, outlasting a host of one-time rivals.
Two challenges above all others are most pressing. First, most campaigns don’t succeed. Victory is a rarity, but the process of publicising, mobilising, dissenting is nevertheless valuable in itself – and a necessary precursor to making more progress.
Second, time is pursuing Eric and those who have travelled with him as LaborStart has developed. A succession plan is both necessary and, thankfully, coalescing.
A fascinating conversation with someone who can fairly be described as iconic.
#thought4theweek
In her “#thought4theweek” Professor Mel Simms from Glasgow University complements the discussion about LaborStart with a focus on the use of social media as an organising tool. She draws out the experience of her own union, the UCU, and sets out three trenchant arguments for being cautious here – data security, ensuring unions are using social media in a way that is accessible, and the risk of abuse.
Do check out the Why Not Lab project – our friend Christina Colclough’s new home on the web dealing with all things involving digital and work and workers. Well worth a visit.
#RadicalRoundUp
Basit Mahmood has low pay in his sights in this week’s #RadicalRoundUp, with miserable wages driving (sorry!) an employment exodus in the bus industry, multiple strikes at Panasonic’s Cardiff plant in a long running row over pay rates, and a clarion call for common sense to prevail on statutory sick pay as the Omicron variant of Covid lands in the UK.
Shout-Outs
And finally, there are shout-outs to Ian Tasker and Rory O’Neil who have both been short-listed for the Most Influential Health and Safety Practitioner of the Year (you can vote here until 31 December), Unite for their important legal win in the long-running Kostal case, and to the Labor Radio Podcast Network, the portal through which you can access 150 union-linked shows.
Download/stream this and all episodes here.
An edited version of this post also appears on Left Foot Forward Photocredit Josue Isai Ramos Figueroa/Unsplash