Whose Movement Is It? Strategic Philanthropy and Worker Centers

The nonprofit worker center model has been heralded as a promising development, given union decline and the rise of low-wage service jobs in the United States. Yet rather than challenging exploitative work conditions, some of the national organizations developed by worker centers have embraced neoli...

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Veröffentlicht in:Critical sociology 2018-07, Vol.44 (4-5), p.645-660
Hauptverfasser: Frantz, Courtney, Fernandes, Sujatha
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Fernandes, Sujatha
description The nonprofit worker center model has been heralded as a promising development, given union decline and the rise of low-wage service jobs in the United States. Yet rather than challenging exploitative work conditions, some of the national organizations developed by worker centers have embraced neoliberal rationalities through projects such as workforce development, employer alliances, and entrepreneurial ventures. In the same period, strategic funding, which applies the logic and techniques of financial investment to grantmaking, has become standard practice for American foundations. As national worker center grantees adopt neoliberal rationalities through their interactions with funders, we argue that these grantees become less inclined to engage in contentious politics. We analyze the projects of two national worker center organizations, contrasting these groups with three local centers that still organize confrontational campaigns. We suggest that by emphasizing worker leadership, involving members in decision-making, and finding alternative funding sources, they have been able to maintain their confrontational politics.
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source Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; Sociological Abstracts; SAGE Journals; Alma/SFX Local Collection
subjects Alliances
Campaigns
Decision making
Employees
Employers
Entrepreneurship
Financing
Investments
Leadership
Neoliberalism
Philanthropy
Politics
Professional development
Social justice
Social movements
Ventures
Work environment
Workforce
Working conditions
title Whose Movement Is It? Strategic Philanthropy and Worker Centers
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