Workers Can Win: A Guide to Organising at Work


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Description

A nuts-and-bolts guide to organizing your workplace from a longtime labor activist.

The Covid, climate, and cost of living crises all hang heavy in the air. It's more obvious than ever that we need radical social and political change. But in the vacuum left by defeated labor movements, where should we begin? For longtime workplace activist Ian Allinson, the answer is clear: organizing at work is essential to rebuilding working-class power.

The premise is simple: organizing builds confidence, capacity, and collective power - and with power, we can win change. Workers Can Win is an essential, practical guide for rank-and-file workers and union activists. Drawing on more than 20 years of experience, Allinson combines practical techniques with an analysis of the theory and politics of organizing and unions.

Allinson offers insight into tried and tested methods for effective organizing. It deals with tactics and strategies and addresses some of the roots of conflict, common problems with unions, and the resistance of management to worker organizing. As a 101 guide to workplace organizing with politically radical horizons, Workers Can Win is destined to become an essential tool for workplace struggles in the years to come.



Author: Ian Allinson
Publisher: Pluto Press (UK)
Published: 10/20/2022
Pages: 272
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 0.70lbs
Size: 8.43h x 5.35w x 0.71d
ISBN13: 9780745347813
ISBN10: 0745347819
BISAC Categories:
- Political Science | Labor & Industrial Relations
- History | Europe | Great Britain | 21st Century
- Social Science | Activism & Social Justice

About the Author
Ian Allinson has been a workplace activist since 1991, working for a private sector employer which didn't recognise a union for most workers, and where he led a number of strikes including the first national strike in the IT industry. He served ten years on the national Executive Committees of Amicus and Unite, and was a candidate for Unite General Secretary in 2017. He is currently industrial action coordinator on the executive committee of Manchester TUC, where he was previously President.