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Last updated: 14/01/09

Dr Jane Holgate

 

Position

Senior Research Fellow

Qualifications

  • BA Geography (Manchester)
  • MA Labour and Trade Union Studies (University of North London)
  • PhD (Queen Mary, University of London)

Background/Career

After seven years of working in the university sector in publications and multi-media Jane completed a part-time MA in Labour and Trade Union Studies at the University of North London (now merged into London Metropolitan University). She then went on to complete her doctoral research which was funded by the ESRC and the Trades Union Congress on ‘Organising black and minority ethnic workers; trade union strategies for recruitment and inclusion’. Following this she was awarded an ESRC Postdoctoral Fellowship at Queen Mary, University of London.

Research interests

Trade unions and the development of organising and recruitment strategies, particularly as they relate to under-represented groups in the union movement; gender and industrial relations; the labour market position of migrants and black and minority ethnic groups; new geographies of labour; the politics of intersectionality (‘race’, class, gender, etc).

Contact details

Dr Jane Holgate
Working Lives Research Institute
31 Jewry St, London EC3N 2EY
j.holgate@londonmet.ac.uk

Tel (w) 020 7320 3029
Tel (h) 020 8802 0373
Tel (m) 07960 798399

 

Awards

Jane was awarded a 3-year ESRC grant in 2007 to work on a project entitled:

Influences of identity, community and social networks on ethnic minority representation at work.

See here for research news sheet 1:

/m35222_3.pdf EMRAW Bulletin 1

Working with Janroj Keles from WLRI and Professor Anna Pollert at University of West of England, the research will theorise the lack of connection between different social actors (ethnic minority workers and trade unions) by considering whether the notion of intersectionality allows for a deeper understanding of how material structures and cultural meanings are interwoven and worked out in practice. The research will attempt to understand the linkages between, and relative significance of, different forms of social divisions as mediated by ethnicity, class, faith, secularism, gender, age, migration, etc. It will also explore whether barriers to engagement exist for some groups of ethnic minority workers in joining or taking part in trade unions and the reason why some workers choose alternative means of accessing support at work.

Jane also has has a Nuffield grant for £11,000 titled ‘Evaluating recent developments in training trade union organisers’ (with Dr Melanie Simms).

Nearly 10 years ago the Trades Union Congress (TUC) launched an innovative training programme in an effort to broaden the focus of UK trade unionism and to represent a wider group of workers. The Organising Academy has since trained over 200 organisers whose job it is to recruit new workers, to develop relationships between unions and employers which have not traditionally had formal union representation in their workplaces, and to try to broaden the appeal of unions to workers who have not traditionally been represented.

Our research, funded by the Nuffield Foundation, has traced almost all of the organisers who have graduated from the Organising Academy and is evaluating what they have been doing since their training. Surprisingly, around 90% are still actively involved in the trade union movement; with many of the rest involved in other political organisations, and one is even a Member of Parliament. The vast majority use their training in their day-to-day roles and evaluated their experiences as being generally positive. More widely, they talk about companies and workplaces where workers now have collective representation rights - small steps, but valuable ones.

Publications

International Refereed Journals

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Book Chapters

Book Reviews

Other Publications

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Conference Papers

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Dissemination of Research

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Conferences organised

 


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Holgate, J, Pollert, P, Keles, J. (2009) Union decline and the lack of employment advice for minority ethnic workers in the UK: can community support organisations help to fill the gap? Paper to be presented at the International Industrial Relations Association Annual Conference, Sydney, 24-27 August 2009.

 

McBride, A. Hebson, G. and Holgate, J. (2009) Whose interests?  Voice and representation in trade unions: the use of intersectional analysis. Paper to be presented at the International Industrial Relations Association Annual Conference, Sydney, 24-27 August 2009.

 

Organising Lives: the personal challenges of promoting trade union renewal. Paper presented to the British Universities Industrial Relations Association Conference, Cardiff 2-4 July 2009.

 

 London’s living wage campaign: an issue of territory and a struggle over place. Paper presented at Developing Theoretical Approaches in Labour Geography conference, University of Liverpool 11-12th June 2009

 

Invited speaker at Transatlantic Dialogue conference Cornell University, Ithaca, May 7–9 2009.

 

Keles, J. Holgate, J, Pollert, P. (2009) To whom do I turn when I am invisible? The experiences of Kurdish workers who have problems at work. Paper presented at the British Sociological Association Annual Conference, Cardiff, 15-17 April 2009.

 

Holgate, J, Pollert, P, Keles, J. (2009) The influence of identity, ‘community’ and social networks on how workers access support for work-based problems. Paper presented at the International Labour Process Conference, Edinburgh, 6-8 April 2009

 

Is there an organising model? An empirical critique. Paper presented to the British Universities Industrial Relations Association Conference, Bristol, June 2008.

 

The TUC Organising Academy: what has been the impact? (second version of paper). Paper presented to International Labour Process Conference, Dublin March 2008.

 

TUC Organising Academy 10 years on: what has been the impact? Paper presented Work Employment and Society Conference, Aberdeen, September 2007.

 

Equal opportunities policies: how effective are they in increasing diversity in a freelance labour market? Paper presented International Industrial Relations Association conference, Manchester, September 2007.

 

Moral dilemmas in organising migrant workers: a strategy for growth or a sign of weak bargaining position?. Paper presented to ‘Transatlantic Dialogue conference’ organised by Cornell University in Brussels, March 2–3 2007. (Invited speaker).

 

Contextualising community unionism. Paper presented at Contextualising Community Unionism workshop

21 and 22 September 2006, School of Management, University of Bradford.

 

‘I don’t regret my degree but…’: employment opportunities for new entrants into the audio-visual industries – the influence of ‘race’, class and gender. Presented to the British Universities Industrial Relations Association 56th Annual Conference. University of Galway, Ireland 28–30 June 2006.

 

Organising migrant workers in London: working with communities. Paper presented to ‘Transatlantic Dialogue conference’ at Cornell University, May 4–6 2006. (Invited speaker).

 

Trade union responses to organising migrant workers: the relevance of identity, ‘community’ and social networks. Paper presented to 24th International Labour Process Conference, Birkbeck University 10–12 April 2006.

 

Do global unions make sense? Paper presented to ‘Global companies, global unions, global research, global campaigns conference’ organised by Cornell University, New York, February 9–11, 2006.

 

The influence of ‘race’, identity and community on the organisation of migrant workers. Paper presented to Critical Labour Studies conference, Leeds University. December 14-15 2005.

 

Invited to present plenary session at the 55th British Universities Industrial Relations Annual Conference. University of Northumbria, July 2005, on ‘Why “difference” matters: a critical appraisal of industrial relations research’.

 

Placing Labour in London: trade union strategy and practice. Paper presented to ‘Strategies for urban labour revitalization conference’ at Cornell University, October 1–3 2004. (Invited speaker).

 

Organising migrant workers: a case study of working conditions and unionisation at a sandwich factory in London. Paper presented to the Work Employment and Society Conference, University of Manchester 1–3 September 2004.

 

The influence of ‘race’, identity and community in union organising in west London. 54th British Universities Industrial Relations Annual Conference, University of Nottingham, 1–3 July 2004.

 

Organising black and minority ethnic workers in trade unions: a case study of retail workers in central London. International Employment Relations Association 11th Annual Conference, University of Greenwich, London, 8–11 July 2003.

 

Trade unions: a place to unify struggles for economic and social justice?’ Paper presented to the Association of American Geographers 99th Annual Conference, 4–8 March 2003.


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