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Title: Workers’ Self-Management
Author: Winter Jones
Date: March 16, 2017
Language: en
Topics: economics, economy, workers’ control, self-management, organization
Source: http://ideasandaction.info/2017/03/workers-self-management/

Winter Jones

Workers’ Self-Management

What is Workers’ Self-Management?

Workers’ Self-Management is exactly what it sounds like — workers

controlling their own workplaces, answering to nobody other than

themselves, and also to their fellow workers. Everybody involved in

making the workplace’s decisions is on an equal footing: one person, one

vote. This does not mean that every decision is made collectively. If

something only affects one worker, then that worker can make the

decision themselves. However, whenever a decision affects multiple

workers, then all affected have an equal say in deciding things.

How would anything get done without a boss? What is the workplace

structure?

When you have a boss constantly telling you what to do, you feel very

disempowered at work. Hierarchical management drains the lifeblood of

the worker and leaves them feeling alienated from their job. This is why

people often complain about their jobs. This sense of disempowerment

leads to people being “lazy” and not working as well. Let’s face it,

nobody likes it when someone else tells you what to do and you don’t

have any say in the matter. In the sphere of work, if you disobey your

boss, you are likely to be left without a job.

Contrast this nightmare with workers’ self-management. In workers’

self-management you have as much say in how things are run as every

other worker. A system of shop floor direct democracy is implemented in

which each worker affected by a decision collectively decide upon the

decision. In small workplaces, this is very easily done by using a

simple collective structure.

In larger workplaces, this can be done very easily by dividing

workplaces into departments. The departments could be divided based on

the type of work being done. They would consist of the teams of workers

who work together in day-to-day tasks. Each department would function

similar to a small worker’s collective.

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When workplace-wide decisions must be made, a delegate from each

department could be sent to a meeting of all the departments. The

delegate would have no power over their individual department, but would

instead convey the wishes of their department as previously agreed upon

by those in it. The delegates would be frequently rotated so that no one

worker could gain too much influence over the others. The decisions of

the delegates are subject to the democratic approval of the workers at

the workplace, and in this way are mandated.

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