University of Groningen. Posted work and deterritorialization in the European Union Wagner, Ines

Similar documents
Posted Work and Deterritorialization in the European Union

CURRICULUM VITAE. Dr. Ines Wagner

University of Groningen. Dengue in Venezuela Velasco, Zoraida

1. Introduction. 1.1 Topics and research questions to be explored. The main topics we want to explore in this paper are:

Life courses of highly skilled Indian migrants in the Netherlands and the United Kingdom Kou, Anu

University of Groningen. State-business relations in post-1998 Indonesia Hartono, I.

Citation for published version (APA): Ankersmit, F. R. (1981). Narrative logic. A semantic analysis of the historian's language s.n.

Making Sense of Constitutional Monarchism in Post- Napoleonic France and Germany

University of Groningen. Posted work and deterritorialization in the European Union Wagner, Ines

[Review of: S. Evju (2013) Cross-border services, posting of workers, and multilevel governance] Cremers, J.M.B.

Fluctuating Transnationalism

Dr. Jennifer E. Shore

Diversity on City Councils? Shortcomings Abound

University of Groningen. Repatriation and the best interests of the child Zevulun, Daniëlle

UvA-DARE (Digital Academic Repository) Between local governments and communities van Ewijk, E. Link to publication

The two sides of the same coin Huinink, Johannes; Kulu, Hill; Mulder, Clara; Schneider, Norbert F.; Vidal, Sergi

Migration, Diasporas and Citizenship

Lisa E. Berntsen. Agency of Labour in a Flexible Pan-European Labour Market

The presumption of non-conformity in European consumer sales law Sikorska, Karolina

University of Groningen. Spanningen op de arbeidsmarkt Berkel, Pieter van

European Administrative Governance

MULTICURALISM, IMMIGRATION, AND IDENTITY IN WESTERN EUROPE AND THE UNITED STATES WORKSPACE SITE

Ph.D. Cornell University, Industrial and Labor Relations School, M.A. Cornell University, Industrial and Labor Relations School, 2009

DOI: / Political Branding Strategies

IMT Institute for Advanced Studies, Lucca Lucca, Italy. State, space and security: the treatment of deviant groups in times of crisis

Published by Palgrave Macmillan

Studien zur Neuen Politischen Ökonomie. Herausgegeben von T. Bräuninger, Mannheim, Deutschland G. Schneider, Konstanz, Deutschland

Europeanization, Care and Gender

Personal copy of () The Human Right to Equal Access to Health Care

Democracy Promotion and the Normative Power Europe Framework

Copyright is owned by the Author of the thesis. Permission is given for a copy to be downloaded by an individual for the purpose of research and

A RADICAL ALTERNATIVE? A RE-EVALUATION OF CHANTAL MOUFFE S RADICAL DEMOCRATIC APPROACH

THE ROLE OF THIRD PARTY INTERVENTION IN AFRICA s CIVIL CONFLICTS: THE CASE OF SOUTH AFRICA s PEACE MISSION IN BURUNDI ( )

An Inquiry into the Civic Participation of Naturalised Citizens and Foreign Residents in 25 Countries.

Studien zur Neuen Politischen Ökonomie. Herausgegeben von T. Bräuninger, Mannheim, Deutschland G. Schneider, Konstanz, Deutschland

University of Groningen. Explaining Legal Transplants Kviatek, Beata

Call for applications Redistribution and the Law in an Antagonistic World

Youth, Multiculturalism and Community Cohesion

University of Groningen. Agency of labour in a flexible pan-european labour market Berntsen, Lisa Emma

Youth Participation in Democratic Life

STEFFEN REINHOLD. Private address: Uhlandstr Mannheim, Germany

LIST OF ISSUES ICESCR PRE-SESSION GERMANY 2017

Islam and Politics. Renewal and Resistance in the Muslim World. Amit Pandya Ellen Laipson Editors

NORFACE WELFARE STATE FUTURES THEMATIC WORKSHOP

Curriculum Vitae. Tim Müller

Japanese Moratorium on the Death Penalty

University of Groningen

An EU-Wide Letter of Rights

Unity and diversity of the public prosecution services in Europe. A study of the Czech, Dutch, French and Polish systems Marguery, Tony Paul

WHAT YOU OUGHT TO EAT ORIENTATION VERSUS PATERNALISM

Master in Anti-Corruption Studies

INTRUDUCING A MINIMUM WAGE IN GERMANY?

Immigration Policy and the Labor Market

Support for posted workers: the bilateral way: proposal for a CLR pilot project Cremers, J.M.B.

Early Debates about Industry

H. E. Mr. SIENG Lapresse

TRANSFORMING THINK TANKS INTO POLICY HUBS : THE CREATION OF RESEARCH POLICY NETWORKS

Globalization and the possibility of transnational actors - the case of trade unions: Final Report Outcomes and Conclusions.

Civic Participation of immigrants in Europe POLITIS key ideas and results

UvA-DARE (Digital Academic Repository) Conditional belonging de Waal, T.M. Link to publication

Emigration again Ireland 1980s, Poland 2000s, Ireland

The new immigrant elite in German politics: representation in city councils

InGRID2 Expert Workshop Integration of Migrants and Refugees in Household Panel Surveys

ZEW Economic Studies. Publication Series of the Centre for European Economic Research (ZEW), Mannheim, Germany

Political Traditions and UK Politics

University of Groningen. Between Welfare and Farewell de Jong, Petra Wieke

1. Migration snapshot of the city of Berlin

Zukunftsbrücke: Chinese German Young Professional Campus

Growing restrictiveness or changing selection? The nature and evolution of migration policies de Haas, H.G.; Natter, K.; Vezzoli, S.

Migration: Global challenges, European responses

The Baltic Sea Strategy for Fair and Functional Labour Markets Trade Union Standpoints on the Baltic Sea Strategy

EU Labor Markets After Post-Enlargement Migration

Marion Fischer-Neumann 19/09/2015 CURRICULUM VITAE. Marion Fischer-Neumann, M.A.

British Values in Art

THE RISE OF INTERACTIVE GOVERNANCE AND QUASI-MARKETS

Recht und Verfassung in Afrika 33 Law and Constitution in Africa

Copyright is owned by the Author of the thesis. Permission is given for a copy to be downloaded by an individual for the purpose of research and

State Regulation of the Charitable Sector

Sharing Languages - Edinburgh students work with refugees in Germany

Volume 2, Issue 4, December Intellectual Property, Competition and Human Rights: the past, the present and the future

Of States, Rights, and Social Closure

NGOs, IGOs, and the Network Mechanisms of Post-Conflict Global Governance in Microfinance

Ethnic Citizenship Regimes

PROF. DR. ANUSCHEH FARAHAT, LL.M. (BERKELEY)/Maîtr. en Droit (Paris X) WORK EXPERIENCE ACADEMIC EDUCATION

Doctor of Legal Science, Faculty of International Law and International Relations, Tbilisi State University, Tbilisi, Georgia

Yemen s Democracy Experiment in Regional Perspective

Two PhD Scholarships and One Postdoctoral Scholarship on Migrants Social Protection Strategies

By Joanna Smigiel. Submitted to Central European University Department of Public Policy

Abstract The growing population of foreign live-in caregivers in the Greater Toronto Area (GTA) has

The Role of Business in Fostering Peaceful Societies

Report Volume I. Halle/Saale

Between Complicity and Resistance: A Social History of the University Presses in Apartheid South Africa. Elizabeth Henriette le Roux

The Politics of Sociability

UvA-DARE (Digital Academic Repository)

Models of Capitalism (Master course)

TRANSNATIONAL ORGANIZED CRIME

UNIVERSITÄT HOHENHEIM

The Notion of Progress in International Law Discourse

Colleagues, ladies and gentlemen, Good morning.

Copyright is owned by the Author of the thesis. Permission is given for a copy to be downloaded by an individual for the purpose of research and

Transcription:

University of Groningen Posted work and deterritorialization in the European Union Wagner, Ines IMPORTANT NOTE: You are advised to consult the publisher's version (publisher's PDF) if you wish to cite from it. Please check the document version below. Document Version Publisher's PDF, also known as Version of record Publication date: 2015 Link to publication in University of Groningen/UMCG research database Citation for published version (APA): Wagner, I. (2015). Posted work and deterritorialization in the European Union: a study of the German construction and meat industry Groningen: University of Groningen, SOM research school Copyright Other than for strictly personal use, it is not permitted to download or to forward/distribute the text or part of it without the consent of the author(s) and/or copyright holder(s), unless the work is under an open content license (like Creative Commons). Take-down policy If you believe that this document breaches copyright please contact us providing details, and we will remove access to the work immediately and investigate your claim. Downloaded from the University of Groningen/UMCG research database (Pure): http://www.rug.nl/research/portal. For technical reasons the number of authors shown on this cover page is limited to 10 maximum. Download date: 09-02-2018

Publisher: University of Groningen Groningen, the Netherlands Printed by: PrintPartners Ipskamp B.V. ISBN: 978-90-367-7493-2 eisbn: 978-90-367-7491-8 Copyright 2014 Ines Alisa Wagner 1

Posted Work and Deterritorialization in the European Union A study of the German Construction and Meat Industry PhD thesis to obtain the degree of PhD at the University of Groningen on the authority of the Rector Magnificus Prof. E. Sterken and in accordance with the decision by the College of Deans. This thesis will be defended in public on Thursday 05 February 2015 at 12.45 hours by Ines Alisa Wagner born on 07 February 1984 in Bad Homburg v. d. Höhe., Germany 2

Supervisor Prof. S. Beugelsdijk Co-supervisor Dr. N.A. Lillie Assessment committee Prof. M. Houwerzijl Prof. G. Jackson Prof. N. Kauppi Prof. J. Steen Knudsen 3

This dissertation is lovingly dedicated to the memory of my mother, Olga Wagner. Diese Dissertation ist in liebevollem Andenken meiner Mutter, Olga Wagner, gewidmet. 4

ABSTRACT In the European Union worker posting has become a standard way for firms to reduce wage costs. Posted workers are a type of labour migrant sent by their employer to work temporarily in another EU member state. Their labour, employment and social security rights are embedded in both the sending and the host countries. This inhibits effective regulation of labour markets and labour relations within insular political economies. The regulatory capacity of states is deterritorialized. At the same time, the transnational flexibilisation of employment relations increases. This study will explore the interrelationship between transformations of labour markets and nation states in the EU, two trends that are embodied in the posting relationship. The workplace-level focus reveals how posting actors redefine the posting regulatory framework, and conversely how the effects of EU integration impact industrial relations practices and labour market regulation. The aim is to decipher the current labour market structure and dynamics of change in transnational workspaces in a pan-european labour market. I focus on two industries in Germany, the construction and meat industries, because of the prevalence of posted work in them. The bottom-up case study data supports four main findings. First, transnational subcontracting allows the emergence of different regulatory spaces at the national and workplace levels. Second, it opens exit options for capital but constrains voice options of unions, works councils and mobile workers. Third, transnational workspaces also create opportunities for transnational action; however, these opportunities take other forms than those usually expected within the German political economy. Fourth, borders in the EU are not abolished, but shift and are activated by mobility practices. In order to decipher the current structure of the pan-european labour market it is necessary to relate the shift in state borders to the shift in firm borders, since these transformations create a differentiated system of rights for mobile workers. Although posted work is a particularly complex policy field, labour migration as such is regarded as a decisive field where the profile of mid-21 st -century Europe will be forged (Pries 2001). Keywords: European integration, labour mobility, institutional change, Germany 5

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS It has been a privilege and pleasure to do my PhD research as part of the ERC project 263782 Transnational Work and the Evolution of Sovereignty. This project created the infrastructure for me to do this particular field work, created the opportunity for me to present my work at international conferences, to collaborate and exchange with academics with similar research interests, and has greatly contributed to my professional and personal development. I am humbled to have met, and worked with so many inspiring, knowledgeable workers, practitioners and academics. I wish to express my gratitude to Nathan Lillie, one of my supervisors and the principal investigator of Transnational Work and the Evolution of Sovereignty. Nathan, thank you for your continuous support, trust and encouragement. You have given me the freedom to creatively develop my own thoughts, view and voice in academic debates. My deep appreciation also goes out to Sjoerd Beugelsdijk, my supervisor at the University of Groningen and to Marja Keränen, my co-supervisor at the University of Jyväskylä. Sjoerd, your thorough reading and comments on the structure and contextualisation of the research have greatly contributed to the development of this dissertation. Marja, thank you for carefully reading all the 6

drafts of my chapters and for constructive discussions about my work, which has aided in sharpening my arguments. For this dissertation I would like to thank my reading committee members: Niilo Kauppi, Jette Steen Knudsen, Gregory Jackson and Mijke Houwerzijl for their time, interest, and helpful comments. A very special thanks goes out to all the interviewees. In spite of the barriers of conducting research on a politically sensitive topic, I was able to interview various people involved in the posting relationship: posted workers, native workers working with posted workers, volunteers, activists, trade unionists, works councillors, community members, managers and government and EU officials. Due to the politically sensitive nature of the research I am grateful to the interviewees who shared their insights on posted work. Out of consideration for their anonymity, I am sorry I cannot give recognition to some of those who helped me most. Without them, this work would obviously not have been possible. Furthermore, I would like to extend my thanks to the interpreters, translators and transcribers who aided me in the development of the interviews: Aleksandra Koch, Anna Grygiel, Mateusz Dymarek, Anna Siwiec-Glab, Adam Gaik, Tijana Milunovic, Kamila Meyer, Anca Gabriela Lelutiu, Judith Schneider and Julia Schlüter. I want to extend my thanks to the research team of the project Transnational Work and the Evolution of Sovereignty and of the project Industrial Citizenship and Labour mobility in the EU. Thanks are due to Lisa Berntsen, Erka Caro, Sonila Danaj, Laura Mankki and Markku Sippola for creating such a pleasant working environment. Lisa deserves a special thanks. We started our PhD projects at the same time, and got to know PhD student life together including the ups and downs that are part of it. Lisa, I very much appreciate the ways in which we have exchanged views on a 7

wide variety of interesting topics; it was a pleasure. I am looking forward to our continuous collaboration and friendship in the future. I would like to thank my colleagues at the University of Groningen at the Department of Global Economics and Management and at the University of Jyväskylä at the Department of Political Science for providing me with a pleasant working environment. Thanks are due to Miriam Wilhelm, Marjolein Onrust, Dimitris Soudis, Katja Mäkinen, Anu Kettunen and Marko Nousiainen for interesting discussions and feedback. I sincerely thank the members of the SOM Research Institute for their kind assistance and support. These include Ellen Nienhuis, Rina Koning and Arthur deboer. At the University of Jyväskylä I would like to thank Tarja Etelälahti, Tiina Hokkanen and Sari Korkia-aho for continuous support. I would also like to thank all the people and institutions that facilitated and supported my guest research stays in Germany. I want to thank the Max-Planck Institute for the Study of Societies in Cologne. Thanks go out to the research group Political Economy of European Integration, and in particular to Martin Höpner, Benjamin Werner and Martin Seeliger. I have greatly benefitted from productive discussions and comments on my work. Many thanks also to Chiara Benassi and Inga Rademacher who have made my stay at the MPI much more pleasant. I would also like to offer my thanks to the WSI within the Hans-Boeckler Stiftung for their kind Gastfreundschaft during the time I spent at the institute. Thanks are due to Brigitte Unger, Christiane Borsch, Karin Schulze Buschoff, Jutta Höhne, Nadine Absenger, Thorsten Schulten, Martin Behrens, Reinhard Bispinck, Christina Klenner, Birgit Kraemer, Elke Ahlers, Yvonne Lott, Dorothee Spannagel, Daniel Seikel, Florian Blank and Phillipp Klages. I enjoyed and benefitted not only from my research stay at the institute but also from the WSI summer school in 8

Berlin in 2012. I want to thank my fellow WSI summer schoolers Lisa Dorigatti, Chiara Benassi, Nadja Doerflinger and Jenny Auffenberg for making academic conferences not only intellectually stimulating but also fun. A lot of people provided insightful comments on the chapters during different draft stages. In no particular order I would like to thank Virginia Doellgast, Ian Bruff, Matthias Ebenau, Andreas Nölke, Christian May, Miriam Kullmann, Martin Behrens, Katja Mäkinen, Marko Nousiainen, Gregory Jackson, Maite Tapia, Martin Seeliger, Benjamin Werner, Andreas Bieler, Roland Erne, Knut Kjeldstadli, Sabina Stan as well as various anonymous reviewers. Support for travel and conference organization was provided by the Economic and Social Research Institute within the Hans Böckler Foundation, the Society for Advancement of Socio Economics, The Centre for Advanced Study at the Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters, the Society for Advancement of Management Studies, Assoziation für Kritische Gesellschaftsforschung, the BISA International Political Economy Group, the University of Jyväskylä, University of Groningen and the University of Duisburg- Essen. Finally, I want to thank my family for their never-ending encouragement and belief in me. Diese Dissertation ist meiner wunderbaren Mutter gewidmet. Ohne ihre Unterstützung und Ermutigung, ihre beständige Liebe und Vertrauen wäre diese Dissertation niemals geschrieben worden. Papa, Oma und Opa, Danke für Eure große Unterstützung und bedingungslose Liebe, die es mir ermöglicht haben, diesen Weg zu gehen. Tanja, meine Schwester, Danke besonders für die emotionale und mentale Unterstützung. Dein Rückhalt gibt mir Kraft und Vertrauen. Heartfelt thanks are also due to Philip Fleischer, the Vermeulen family and the extended Wagner family who all have been more than supportive and caring. Anne and Jan many thanks for lending your support in various translation exercises. Samantha, thank you very much for your excellent proofreading. Sincere thanks are due to all my 9

dearest friends, old and new, but in particular to Solveig, Lev, Hugo, Nan, Alex, Julie, Robin, Charlotte, Mette, Claudia, Chrissi, Shikha, Koen and Simona. Tim, my deepest gratitude goes to you, for always being there, patiently listening to my endless ramblings about posted work, for waiting up late at night with a warm cup of tea after exhausting field work trips, for critically reading my drafts and supporting me in every possible way. Most of all, thank you for the wondrous life outside of academia full of love and laughter. I am looking forward to our next adventures whatever they may be! 10

CONTENTS ABSTRACT... 5 1. INTRODUCTION & BACKGROUND... 15 1.1 Introduction... 15 1.2 Posted work in the EU and how it is regulated... 19 1.2.1 Operationalizing Posted Work... 20 1.3 Posted work and the impact of Eastern European accession... 21 1.4 The role of the ECJ and the clash of capitalisms... 24 1.5 Deterritorialization and institutional change in transnational workspaces26 1.5.1 The usage of rules in transnational workspaces... 27 1.5.2 Exit, voice and labour market dualisation in transnational workspaces... 29 1.5.3 The possibilities of resistance... 31 1.5.4 Mapping the pan-european labour market: Borders and institutional... 33 systems... 33 1.6 The German regulatory framework for worker posting... 36 1.7 The structure of this thesis... 40 2. METHODOLOGY... 42 2.1 The approach... 42 2.2 Data collection... 45 2.2.1 Industry and workplace case study selection... 47 2.2.2 Interview guides and interviews... 48 2.2.3 Gaining access to posted workers... 50 2.2.4 Interviews with transnational posted workers... 51 2.2.5 Use of interpreters... 54 2.2.6 Native workers... 55 2.2.7 Primary sources... 56 2.2.8 Participant observation and field notes... 56 2.3 Analysis... 57 3. RULE ENACTMENT IN A PAN-EUROPEAN LABOUR MARKET: TRANSNATIONAL POSTED WORK IN THE GERMAN CONSTRUCTION SECTOR... 62 3.1 Introduction... 62 3.2 Posted work in the German construction sector... 65 3.3 Research methods... 68 3.4 Micro-level rule enactment... 70 3.4.1 Management Practices... 70 3.4.2 Posted workers perceptions... 73 3.4.3 Union strategy and rule enforcement... 74 3.5 The possibilities for institutional change through rule enactment at the micro level... 76 3.6 Conclusion... 80 11

4. EUROPEAN INTEGRATION AND THE DISEMBEDDING OF LABOUR MARKET REGULATION: TRANSNATIONAL LABOUR RELATIONS AT THE EUROPEAN CENTRAL BANK CONSTRUCTION SITE... 85 4.1 Introduction... 85 4.2 Methods and case selection... 88 4.3 Organised capitalism, territorial cohesion and collective goods... 88 4.4 Mechanisms for opening the European space... 91 4.5 German industrial relations... 93 4.6 The European Central Bank Construction Project... 96 4.6.1 Voice Mechanisms for Posted Workers... 99 4.6.2 Working in Spaces of Exception... 102 4.7 Discussion... 103 4.8 Conclusions... 105 5. EU POSTED WORK AND TRANSNATIONAL ACTION IN THE GERMAN MEAT INDUSTRY... 108 5.1 Introduction... 108 5.2 De- and reterritorialization in the context of EU worker posting... 111 5.3 Research methods... 115 5.4 Transnational action in the German meat industry... 116 5.4.1 Power relations in transnational workspaces... 118 5.4.2 A moment of transnational action... 119 5.4.3 From the local to the national... 123 5.5 Discussion... 125 5.6 Conclusion... 130 6. THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF BORDERS IN A BORDERLESS EUROPEAN LABOUR MARKET...132 6.1 Introduction... 133 6.2 The spatial reconstruction of EU labour market regulation... 135 6.3 Research methods... 140 6.4 Bordering practices in transnational workspaces... 141 6.4.1 Borders to regulatory enforcement... 141 6.4.2 Firm borders... 145 6.5 The implication of the spatial reconfiguration of employment relations for trade unions and posted workers... 148 6.6 Mapping the shape of the pan-european labour market... 150 7. CONCLUSION... 156 7.1 Introduction... 156 7.2 The Enforcement Directive of the Posting of Workers Directive... 159 7.3 Practical and utopian considerations on how to proceed... 162 7.4 Implications, future research and industrial and global patterns... 165 Annex I... 169 12

BIBLIOGRAPHY... 171 13

ARTICLES ARTICLE I ARTICLE II ARTICLE III ARTICLE IV Wagner, I. (2014) Posted Work and Rule Enactment in the German Construction Sector. British Journal of Industrial Relations. doi: 10.1111/bjir.12053 Wagner, I. and Lillie, N. 2014. Deterritorialization of Sovereignty and the Disembedding of Labour Market Regulation: Transnational Labour Relations at the European Central Bank Construction Site. Journal of Common Market Studies 52 (2): 403 419. Wagner, I. EU posted work and transnational action in the German meat industry. Transfer: European Review of Labour and Research as part of the special issue European Collective Action in Times of Crisis. Accepted and forthcoming 2015-2. Wagner, I. The political economy of borders in a borderless European labour market. Submitted to Journal of Common Market Studies (Revise and Resubmit). 14