Worker Voice in America: Is There a Gap between What Workers Expect and What They Experience?
Top Cited Papers
- 11 October 2018
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in ILR Review
- Vol. 72 (1), 3-38
- https://doi.org/10.1177/0019793918806250
Abstract
This article is the fifth in a series to celebrate the 70th anniversary of the ILR Review. The series features articles that analyze the state of research and future directions for important themes this journal has featured over many years of publication. The decline in unionization experienced in the United States over the past 40 years raises a question of fundamental importance to workers, society, and the field of industrial relations: Have workers lost interest in having a voice at work, or is there a gap between workers’ expectations for a voice and what they actually experience? And if a “voice gap” exists, what options are available to workers to close that gap? The authors draw on a nationally representative survey of workers that both updates previous surveys conducted in 1977 and 1995 and goes beyond the scope of these previous efforts to consider a wider array of workplace issues and voice options. Results indicate that workers believe they should have a voice on a broad set of workplace issues, but substantial gaps exist between their expected and their actual level of voice at work. Nearly 50% of non-union workers say they would vote for a union, compared to approximately one-third in the two prior national surveys, which points to continued interest in unions as a voice mechanism. Additionally, the authors find significant variation in the rates of use of different voice options and workers’ satisfaction with those options. The results suggest that a sizable voice gap exists in American workplaces today, but at the same time, no one voice option fits all workers or all issues.Keywords
This publication has 29 references indexed in Scilit:
- Employee Voice Behavior: Integration and Directions for Future ResearchAcademy of Management Annals, 2011
- Immigrant Workers, Precarious Work, and the US Labor MovementGlobalizations, 2011
- When Do U.S. Workers First Experience Unionization? Implications for Revitalizing the Labor MovementIndustrial Relations: A Journal of Economy and Society, 2010
- Leadership Behavior and Employee Voice: Is the Door Really Open?The Academy of Management Journal, 2007
- Collective Bargaining as Industrial Democracy: Hugh Clegg and the Political Foundations of British Industrial Relations PluralismBritish Journal of Industrial Relations, 2007
- Songs of OurselvesJournal of Management Inquiry, 2000
- Dispute Resolution in the Nonunion FirmJournal of Conflict Resolution, 1987
- The Corporate Ombudsman: An Overview and AnalysisNegotiation Journal, 1987
- Why Workers Want Unions: The Role of Relative Wages and Job CharacteristicsJournal of Political Economy, 1980
- COLLECTIVE BARGAINING, FLANDERS, AND THE WEBBSBritish Journal of Industrial Relations, 1975