Workplace partnership in Ireland: Irreconcilable tensions between an ‘Irish third way’ of voluntary mutuality and neo-liberalism
Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Chapter › peer-review
Standard Standard
Developing Postive Employment Relations: International Experiences of Labour Management Partnership. ed. / Stewart Johnstone; Adrian Wilkinson. Palgrave Macmillan Publishing, 2016. p. 101-123.
Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Chapter › peer-review
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TY - CHAP
T1 - Workplace partnership in Ireland
T2 - Irreconcilable tensions between an ‘Irish third way’ of voluntary mutuality and neo-liberalism
AU - Dobbins, Anthony
AU - Dundon, Tony
PY - 2016/5/10
Y1 - 2016/5/10
N2 - This chapter provides an overview of the national institutional context and state policies in promoting voluntary workplace partnership in the Republic of Ireland. The chapter draws on analysis from Dobbins and Dundon (2015). Workplace partnership is distinct from national-level social pacts in that in the former, it is claimed by advocates that participants actively engage in social dialogue leading to more informed decision-making for the good of all stakeholders at organizational level. In contrast, social partnership at national level comprised consensus-seeking pacts between government, employers and trade unions, whereby the parties engaged in centralized bargaining over key macroeconomic and social issues. Ireland has promoted national-level social partnership from 1987 until its collapse in 2009, with a distinct objective of diffusing collaborative partnership to enterprise level. The two levels—national and workplace—are not mutually exclusive and interlink in important ways. National policy and institutions shape the context in which workplace-level cooperative arrangements are enacted and played out. Tripartite bargained consensus at a national level—involving government, employers and unions as the major ‘partners’—was seen as a precursor to the efficacy of workplace-level partnerships.
AB - This chapter provides an overview of the national institutional context and state policies in promoting voluntary workplace partnership in the Republic of Ireland. The chapter draws on analysis from Dobbins and Dundon (2015). Workplace partnership is distinct from national-level social pacts in that in the former, it is claimed by advocates that participants actively engage in social dialogue leading to more informed decision-making for the good of all stakeholders at organizational level. In contrast, social partnership at national level comprised consensus-seeking pacts between government, employers and trade unions, whereby the parties engaged in centralized bargaining over key macroeconomic and social issues. Ireland has promoted national-level social partnership from 1987 until its collapse in 2009, with a distinct objective of diffusing collaborative partnership to enterprise level. The two levels—national and workplace—are not mutually exclusive and interlink in important ways. National policy and institutions shape the context in which workplace-level cooperative arrangements are enacted and played out. Tripartite bargained consensus at a national level—involving government, employers and unions as the major ‘partners’—was seen as a precursor to the efficacy of workplace-level partnerships.
U2 - 10.1057/978-1-137-42772-4_5
DO - 10.1057/978-1-137-42772-4_5
M3 - Chapter
SN - 978-1137427700
SN - 978-1-137427724
SP - 101
EP - 123
BT - Developing Postive Employment Relations
A2 - Johnstone, Stewart
A2 - Wilkinson, Adrian
PB - Palgrave Macmillan Publishing
ER -