Regulation, Change and the Work Environment
Loading...
Date
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Abstract
This special issue of Relations industrielles / Industrial Relations presents
articles based on original research on fundamental changes to work and work
arrangements that undermine workers’ health and safety, exacerbate health
inequalities and pose major challenges to those who want to resist a 'race to the
bottom' in working conditions and imagine and promote regulatory reforms to
better protect workers and their health. The papers in this special issue not only
make a contribution to knowledge about work intensification and employment
precariousness and their impact on health and safety, but also shed light on
further challenges presented by the current globalized work environment: the
association of precariousness with international, regional and local employment related mobility, both in developed and developing countries; the commuting
difficulties faced by some workers in precarious employment; the non-standard
work schedules resulting from work intensification pressures and the consequential
health and work family balance difficulties; and the dilution of responsibility
for health and safety and for workers’ compensation in international supply
chains. One paper illustrates an old but still pervasive challenge: the production
of a 'paradigm of doubt' which uses and even produces scientific uncertainty to
obscure the effects of hazards to workers’ health, thus delaying the prevention
and compensation of their negative effects on health.
The articles in this special issue all result from presentations made by their
authors at the International Conference on Regulation, Change and the Work
Environment1 that was held in December 2015 at the University of Ottawa. The
idea for the conference series that culminated in this conference emerged in
discussions with colleagues from Australia, the United Kingdom, Canada and
France about the importance of ensuring networking opportunities and support
for the next generation of scholars committed to the pursuit of research in the field
of work environment and regulation in the context of globalization. To this end, a
first symposium was hosted by the Cardiff Work Environment Research Centre at
Cardiff University in the summer of 2014, where English speaking scholars from
the Global North and the Global South, and from a variety of disciplines, met to
discuss research on work organization, governance and the regulatory aspects of
occupational health and safety and the work environment (Quinlan et al., 2015).
The Ottawa conference took a further step in consolidating an international
research network in our field, bringing together English speaking participants
from Australia, Canada, China, the UK and the USA, on the one hand, and French
speaking scholars from Belgium, Canada (Quebec) and France on the other.
All of these scholars have been pursuing research on similar issues, addressing
occupational health and safety challenges often arising from globalized labour
markets that are associated with a rise in precarious employment, an increasingly
geographically mobile workforce, and the ”fissuring” of the workplace, to borrow
the term of David Weil (2014).
The contributions to this issue report on research findings from studies
conducted in workplaces and regulatory environments that are quite different from
each other, undertaken by scholars from various disciplines, including sociology,
law, industrial relations/labour and management studies, communications and
ergonomics. Yet the results of these studies, be they from countries with advanced
economies, such as Canada, Australia or France, or emerging economies such as
China, provide a relatively concordant portrait of the challenges raised by the
need for effective regulation of working conditions for the purpose of protecting
workers’ health and safety, and ensuring adequate access to healthcare and
income support when injuries or illnesses arise because of work.
To facilitate our understanding of the cross-cutting messages of these studies,
in this introduction we define key concepts underpinning the conference activities
and, by extension, the articles in this issue. We will first consider 'regulation' in
the field of occupational health and safety, then 'change' looking at precarious
employment, employment-related geographical mobility and globalization. We
will then present highlights from each paper touching on these issues, and, when
necessary, place them in their geographical and historical context.
Description
Keywords
Regulation, Change, Work Environment, occupational health and safety, labour and industrial relations
