Great Britain: increasing victimization of union activists, especially in public services

The significance of each victimisation is not just the individual activist concerned and their job and livelihood. Rather, it also the impact of undermining collective protection for the union members they represent and the message sent out to others, namely, the potential detriment to a worker’s livelihood to be faced for representing co-workers.
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lement. By Gregor Gall, Research Professor of Industrial Relations, Director of the Work and Employment Research Unit (WERU), University of Hertfordshire. (Ref. 100522)

The significance of each victimisation is not just the individual activist concerned and their job and livelihood. Rather, it also the impact of undermining collective protection for the union members they represent and the message sent out to others, namely, the potential detriment to a worker’s livelihood to be faced for repres

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