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Health and Safety Reps in COVID-19—Representation Unleashed?

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posted on 2024-04-10, 10:51 authored by Sian Moore, Minjie Cai, Chris Ball, Matt Flynn

The paper explores the role of UK union health and safety representatives and changes to representative structures governing workplace and organisational Occupational Health and Safety (OHS) during COVID-19. It draws upon a survey of 648 UK Trade Union Congress (TUC) Health and Safety (H&S) representatives, as well as case studies of 12 organisations in eight key sectors. The survey indicates expanded union H&S representation, but only half of the respondents reported H&S committees in their organisations. Where formal representative mechanisms existed, they provided the basis for more informal day-to-day engagement between management and the union. However, the present study suggests that the legacy of deregulation and the absence of organisational infrastructures meant that the autonomous collective representation of workers’ interests over OHS, independent of structures, was crucial to risk prevention. While joint regulation and engagement over OHS was possible in some workplaces, OHS in the pandemic has been contested. Contestation challenges pre-COVID-19 scholarship suggestingthat H&S representatives had been captured by management in the context of unitarist practice. The tension between union power and the wider legal infrastructure remains salient.

History

Refereed

  • Yes

Volume

20

Issue number

8

Page range

5551-5551

Publication title

International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health

ISSN

1660-4601

Publisher

MDPI AG

File version

  • Published version

Language

  • eng

Legacy Faculty/School/Department

Faculty of Business & Law

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