Digital communication as a global challenge for trade unions: lessons from Brazil and Portugal

Auteurs

DOI :

https://doi.org/10.11606/0103-2070.ts.2021.182000

Mots-clés :

Digital communication, Trade unionism, Facebook, Brazil, Portugal

Résumé

As a cross-cutting issue encompassing all of society, the evolution of digital technologies is particularly challenging to traditional labour actors that are accustomed to physical work and face-to-face contact. This article discusses the distinctive possibilities of social media use as a forward-thinking global strategy for organised labour. After an initial clarification of useful concepts to consider in the digital age, we focus on the social media presence of trade unions, identifying the pros and cons associated with platform-based communication. Finally, the article debates the implications of social media platforms as tools to strengthen networks with nonunion actors and contribute to the amplification of the labour agenda. Through a comparative analysis of four trade union confederations, two from Brazil and two from Portugal, we argue that, despite the possibilities for outreach and interaction enabled by the new communication and information technologies, trade union confederations maintain constricted networks and an outdated top-down communications model.

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Biographies de l'auteur

  • Hermes Augusto Costa, University of Coimbra

    Associated professor at the Faculty of Economics and researcher at the Centre for Social Sciences (CES), University of Coimbra. 

  • Bia Carneiro, University of Coimbra

    PhD Sociology candidate in the programme “Labour Relations, Social Inequalities and Trade Unionism” at the Centre For Social Studies and Faculty of Economics, University of Coimbra. 

     

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Publiée

2021-08-16

Numéro

Rubrique

Dossiê - Lutas trabalhistas transnacionais e repertórios políticos

Comment citer

Costa, H. A. ., & Carneiro, B. (2021). Digital communication as a global challenge for trade unions: lessons from Brazil and Portugal. Tempo Social, 33(2), 183-208. https://doi.org/10.11606/0103-2070.ts.2021.182000