https://journalofpoliticalsociology.org/issue/feed Journal of Political Sociology 2024-01-31T12:49:24+01:00 Jeremias Herberg jeremias.herberg@uba.de Open Journal Systems <p>The Journal of Political Sociology (JPS) opens a forum to discuss 'the political' of societal change. JPS goes beyond a narrow understanding of political sociology to study state organizations, public policy, and much more: articles investigate political processes in art, economics, education, ecology, science, technology, religion, public health, and identity formation. Recent frictions in these fields afford new approaches, dialogues, and methodologies in the study of politics. Engagement with inter- and transdisciplinary approaches, novel methods, and diverse publics therefore is particularly welcome. JPS is committed to empirical inquiry, theoretical reflection and critical debate.</p> https://journalofpoliticalsociology.org/article/view/16601 Transnational solidarity in the world of work? Theoretical framework applied to the European Minimum Wage Directive 2023-08-02T11:06:15+02:00 Ilana Nussbaum Bitran nussbaum@uni-bremen.de Irene Dingeldey dingeldey@uni-bremen.de <p>Taking the European Minimum Wage Directive as an example of solidarity in the EU, we develop a theoretical framework showing different forms of solidary action and discussing them on the transnational level. We reconstruct three types of solidarity-based form of actions that were present in the discussion of the Directive and ask which this forms have been enacted by whom and which role played bridging and bonding elements. We conclude that these elements are important to form interest groups that pushed for the development (or not) of the regulation, which in turn serves as a solidarity measure in the EU.</p> 2023-12-14T00:00:00+01:00 Copyright (c) 2023 Journal of Political Sociology https://journalofpoliticalsociology.org/article/view/17224 Transnational solidarity in times of the pandemic crisis in the European sectoral social dialogues of commerce and social services 2023-08-29T14:50:10+02:00 Franziska Laudenbach f.laudenbach@uni-bremen.de Philipp Gies philipp.gies@uni-bremen.de <p>During the outbreak of the Covid-19 pandemic, social partners were involved into crisis management at different levels. Besides the company and the national level, social partners increased their activities at the European sectoral level. Considering this transnational collective action as an act of solidarity in European employment relations, this paper analyses bridging and bonding as processes allowing for transnational collective acts of solidarity. Based on empirical evidence of case studies of the sectors commerce and social services, the paper shows that the European social partnership serves as a framework allowing for trustful collaboration within which coalition building appears to be “a natural”.</p> 2023-12-14T00:00:00+01:00 Copyright (c) 2023 Journal of Political Sociology https://journalofpoliticalsociology.org/article/view/17482 Transcending Borders? Horizons and Challenges of Global Tech Worker Solidarity 2023-09-05T00:17:28+02:00 Valentin Niebler valentin.niebler@hu-berlin.de <p><em>While the reach of tech firms has become planetary, the counterpower of their workforces often remains local. The article explores the challenges and opportunities to transnational solidarity among tech workers, the higher-paid employee strata of tech companies. Based on three recent cases of transnational organizing, I argue that three markers stick out in the efforts: informal organizing instead of institutional power-building, the importance of labour migration and the surprising lack of using structural power to this date. The articles concludes that tech worker organizing can learn from the conflicts of lower paid gig workers in the industry and institutional developments geared toward transnational worker representation. </em></p> 2023-12-14T00:00:00+01:00 Copyright (c) 2023 Journal of Political Sociology https://journalofpoliticalsociology.org/article/view/15367 Bringing Labour Markets Back in: Inclusionary and Exclusionary Solidarities in Platform Delivery Work in Italy and Belgium 2023-06-26T15:28:44+02:00 Ladin Bayurgil ladin.bayurgil@kuleuven.be Claudia Mara' claudia.mara@kuleuven.be Valeria Pulignano valeria.pulignano@kuleuven.be <p>This research showcases the ways in which the labour market informs the formation of different types of solidarities among platform workers. Building on qualitative research that focuses on the delivery sector in Italy and Belgium, we demonstrate diversity in forms of solidarities built among platform workers. While in Italy, in- and out-group boundaries, particularly those based on language and ethnicity, are successfully crossed by platform workers resulting in what we describe as inclusionary solidarities, in Belgium, they remain rigid resulting in exclusionary solidarities. Our findings demonstrate that two distinct forms of solidarity are informed by the functioning of labour markets, which shape workers’ options for exit outside of the platform world and hence the degree of platform dependency. These processes contribute to the creation of variegated understandings of self and others at work and in the labour market at large that in turn inform the ways in which workers relate to one another and form solidarities.</p> 2023-12-14T00:00:00+01:00 Copyright (c) 2023 Journal of Political Sociology https://journalofpoliticalsociology.org/article/view/16546 Building Platforms Differently 2023-08-01T13:21:56+02:00 Jonas Pentzien jonas.pentzien@ioew.de <p>How do alternative conceptions of exchange emerge and proliferate within platform capitalism? Drawing on research at the intersection of organizational theory and social movement studies and a data set of 18 interviews, this paper examines the strategies that founders of cooperatively-structured platforms employ to gain legitimacy for their novel organizational form. Three key findings are presented: First, to facilitate network extension, activists strategically encroach upon adjacent fields. Second, to ensure economic survival, activists either create sustainable ‘subcultures’ within existing fields or attempt to mobilize entirely new consumer audiences. Third, to compensate for a lack of resources, activists strategically cultivate ‘community.’</p> 2023-12-14T00:00:00+01:00 Copyright (c) 2023 Journal of Political Sociology https://journalofpoliticalsociology.org/article/view/16512 Islands of Trust in a Sea of Locational Competition 2023-08-01T00:01:50+02:00 Hendrik Simon simon@hsfk.de <p><em>How can workers develop solidarity across national borders, when in fact they are, at least potentially, in locational competition with each other? One possible answer is the establishment of transnational trust among worker representatives. This article delves into this argument, specifically examining the International Network Initiative (Internationale Netzwerkinitative, NWI) implemented by IG Metall. Drawing upon participatory research conducted from 2016 to 2023 and focusing on the NWI-project of Lear, a tier-1 automotive supplier, I argue that charting islands of transnational trust in the sea of locational competition is ambitious – but nonetheless possible. &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; </em></p> 2023-12-14T00:00:00+01:00 Copyright (c) 2023 Journal of Political Sociology https://journalofpoliticalsociology.org/article/view/16885 Interview with Gianpaolo Meloni from the Amazon EWC 2023-08-14T09:56:59+02:00 Marcus Franke MFranke1@uni-bremen.de <p>Gianpaolo Meloni started working for Amazon in 2012 in a facility center in Piacenza, Italy. After getting involved in union work over years within the work of amazon, he became an essential part of the team negotiating to found the European Work Council (EWC) in Amazon starting at the end of 2018. The negotiations came to a successful conclusion in 2022 and the EWC began its work with the first meeting in April 2023 with Gianpaolo Meloni as the elected EWC secretary.</p> 2023-12-14T00:00:00+01:00 Copyright (c) 2023 Journal of Political Sociology https://journalofpoliticalsociology.org/article/view/17835 Editorial 2023-09-22T08:55:18+02:00 Ilana Nussbaum Bitran nussbaum@uni-bremen.de Marcus Franke MFranke1@uni-bremen.de Philipp Gies philipp.gies@uni-bremen.de Heiner Heiland heiner.heiland@uni-goettingen.de Franziska Laudenbach f.laudenbach@uni-bremen.de <p>None</p> 2023-12-14T00:00:00+01:00 Copyright (c) 2023 Journal of Political Sociology