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Cosmos

The Centre on Social Movement Studies

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Reclaiming Power: Bridging Social Movements and Industrial Relations in Labour Mobilisation

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This conference builds upon a renewed interest in class issues among social movements and labour scholars. The event seeks to expand the dialogue between the two fields of study by inviting researchers and scholars who actively integrate frameworks from both areas in their research. It also intends to explore synergies between different disciplines by focusing on the dynamics of labour mobilisation in contemporary contexts, with particular attention to the (re-)emergence of precarious and exploited workers as central actors in these struggles. Participants will shed light on workers’ strategies for collective action and their role in reshaping labour politics, considering their interaction with various social actors, including mainstream and grassroots unions. This event will provide a platform for in-depth engagement with intersectional and transnational perspectives, contributing to a deeper understanding of the complexities of labour mobilisation in a globalised era.

Link to follow online the session in Aula Altana                                   Link to follow online the session in Aula Pollaiolo

 

Programme

Monday 26th

11:00 – 11:30 Welcome and introduction

Room: Altana

11:30 – 13:30 Parallel sessions

Panel 1 – Putting labour struggles in their context.

Chair: Alba Arenales Lope (Scuola Normale Superiore) 

Discussant: Clelia Li Vigni (Scuola Normale Superiore)& Martin Portos (Scuola Normale Superiore)

Room: Pollaiolo

Marco Betti, Marcello Pedaci, Guglielmo Meardi (Scuola Normale Superiore)
Strengthening the Power of Marginalized Migrant Workers: The Case of Prato Industrial district

Daniela Chironi (Scuola Normale Superiore)
Contemporary Workers’ Struggles: The ex-GKN Plant in Florence as a Case Study

Lorenzo Cini  (Università Federico II Napoli), Andrea Signoretti  (Università di Trento)
Putting worker mobilizations in (the local) context. Actors, interests, and power relations in the logistics sector in Italy

Paola Imperatore  (Università di Pisa), Massimiliano Andretta  (Università di Pisa)
Industrial Relations at a Crossroads: Ecological Transition and Labour Power in the Automotive Sector

Donatella della Porta (Scuola Normale Superiore), Marco Antonelli (Scuola Normale Superiore)
A chain of worker’s struggles: how labour protests spread in time and space 

Panel 2 – Labour struggles in the logistic sector.

Chair: Vincenzo Maccarrone (Scuola Normale Superiore)

Discussants: Devi Sacchetto (Università di Padova) & Angelo Moro (Università di Modena e Reggio Emilia)

Room: Altana

Mattia Frapporti (Università  di  Bologna), Adam Mrozowicki (University of Wroclaw) , Maurilio Pirone (Università  di  Bologna) and Szymon Pilch (University of Wroclaw)
“Work Hard, Have Fun, Make History”? Struggles within Amazon in Italy and Poland

Kyoko Tominaga (Ritsumeikan University)
Weapons of the precarious: self-employed small business activists in Japan

Andrea Bottalico  (Università Federico II Napoli), Giuseppe D’Onofrio (Università di Salerno)
“We Were Nothing Before”. The Emergence of Logistics Workers’ Resistance and Unionization in Southern Italy

Francesco Massimo (Università di Bologna)
The politics of (de)mobilisation. Rethinking collective action from the point of view of (Amazon’s) management

13:30 – 15:00 lunch break

15:00 – 17:00 Opening Session and Keynotes: Gabriella Alberti (University of Leeds); Katia Pilati (University of Trento) (Room: Altana)

17.00 – 17.15 Break

17.15 – 19.00 – Roundtable (Room: Altana) – interdisciplinary perspectives on Labour Conflict

Chair: Bill Roche (University College Dublin)

Katia  Pilati  (Università  di  Trento),  Sabrina  Perra  (Università  di  Cagliari), Donatella Della Porta (Scuola Normale  Superiore),  Guglielmo  Meardi  (Scuola  Normale  Superiore),  Beverly  Silver  (John  Hopkins University; visiting at Ciampi Institute), Giulia Frosecchi (Università di Firenze)

19:30 Aperitivo – Cibreo Restaurant.

Tuesday 27th

9:00– 11:00 Parallel sessions

Panel 3 – Transnational labour struggles.

Chair: Lucia Amorosi (Scuola Normale Superiore)

Dicussants: Nicolò Deiana  (Scuola Normale Superiore) & Romane Cauqui (Scuola Normale Superiore)

Room: Pollaiolo

Lorenzo Lodi (Scuola Normale Superiore)
De-fetishising unions in global production: scrutinising workers’ power and labour weakness in the automotive global value chain in Morocco and Tunisia

Darragh Golden (University College Dublin)
Transnational labour activism in a supranational context

Vincenzo Maccarrone (Scuola Normale Superiore)
Power Resources in Global Labour Governance

Stephen Gaffney (Université libre de Bruxelles)
A short march through the institutions? Trans-national efforts to politicise unemployment in the EU during the 1990s

Panel 4 – Mapping and analysing labour protests.

Chair: Marco Antonelli (Scuola Normale Superiore)

Discussants: Lorenzo Zamponi  (Scuola Normale Superiore) & Lorenzo Bosi (Scuola Normale Superiore)

Room: Altana

Costanza Galanti (Università di Padova)
What triggers protests for public healthcare? The role of visible attacks, service popularity and users-workers alliances

Ivaylo Dinev  (Centre for East European Studies)et al.*
Labour movements’ strategies in the context of multiple crises: a comparative perspective of Europe

*Noah Vangeel, Ciprian Panzaru, Christina Korkontzelou, Rositsa Makelova, Massimiliano Andretta, Paola Imperatore, Karolien Lenaerts, Gabriela Negoiță, Dimitra Kofti, Lyuboslav Kostov 

Sabrina Perra (Università di Cagliari), Ruth Milkman (CUNY), Katia Pilati (Università di Trento)
Strikes Transformed? Comparing Patterns Of Strike Activity In Italy And The United States, 2008-2018

Alba Arenales Lope (Scuola Normale Superiore)
Mobilising Power Resources in Hospitality: Strategic Use of Pickets, Strikes, and Legal Action in Spain and the UK

11:00 – 11:30 Break

11:30 – 13:30 Parallel sessions

Panel 5 – Feminist and Intersectional perspectives on labour struggles.

Chair: Alba Arenales Lope (Scuola Normale Superiore)

Discussants: Greta Rossi (Scuola Normale Superiore) & Daniela Chironi (Scuola Normale Superiore)

Room: Pollaiolo

Mahienour El-Massry (Arab Council for the Social Sciences)
Weaving Together Struggles: How the Samanoud Textile Strike Reinvigorated Feminist–Labor Solidarity in Egypt

Lucia Amorosi (Scuola Normale Superiore), Sarrah Kassem (Scuola Normale Superiore)
Materialist Intersectionality. Recomposing workers’ fragmented identities at workplaces and beyond

Giada Bonu Rosenkranz  (Scuola  Normale  Superiore),  Anastasia  Barone  (Scuola  Normale  Superiore),  Inés Campillo 
Poza (Universidad Complutense de Madrid), and Elin Peterson (Universidad Complutense de Madrid)
Bringing Anti-Capitalism Back In. Framings of Feminist Advocacy and Issues in Italy and Spain

Lucia Pradella (King’s College London)
Logistics of Solidarity: Palestine, Egypt, and Immigrant Worker Struggles in Italy

Panel 6 -Migrant Mobilisation in the Agro-industry.

Chair: Vincenzo Maccarronee (Scuola Normale Superiore)

Discussants: Irina Aguiari e (Scuola Normale Superiore) & Valeria Piro (Università di Padova)

Room: Altana

Giulia Magnano (Università di Bologna)
Migrant labour in the organic agri-food sector: intermediation, resistance and power dynamics

Karin Astrid Siegmann (International Institute of Social Studies) and Stijn Kluck (Dutch Agro-Ecology Network)
Crosspollinating movements for food, migrant and labour justice across the Atlantic

Giulio Iocco (ReOrient onlus/Osservatorio Fairwatch)
Migrant Workers, Agroecological Farming & Alternative Food Networks in Italy: Exploring achievements and challenges of new forms of social mobilisation for decent work & radical food system change

13:30 – 14:30 Lunch break

14:30 – 16:30 Parallel sessions

Panel 7 – Labour struggles in the care sector.

Chair: Lucia Amorosi  (Scuola Normale Superiore)

Discussants: Stella Christou  (Scuola Normale Superiore) & Sabrina Marchetti (Università di Venezia)

Room: Pollaiolo

 Adam Mrozowicki (University of Wroclaw), Luca Villaggi (Università di Padova) 
Workers’ power and the ethos of care: comparing workers’ organising in care and social assistance in Poland and Italy

Laboratorio Welfare Pubblico
Labour Organising in Italy’s Outsourced Social Care Sector

Ayaz Qureshi (University of Edinburgh)
Political mobilisation of medical professionals in Pakistan

Panel 8 – Migrant labour and collective action.

Chair: Marco Antonelli (Scuola Normale Superiore)

Discussants: Chiara Milan (Scuola Normale Superiore) & Iraklis Dimitriades (Scuola Normale Superiore)

Room: Altana

Davide Però (Università di Padova), Valeria Piro (Università di Padova)
Migrant Workers’ Representation and the Appeal of Independent Grassroots Unionism. Insights from Britain and Italy-

Rasmus Ahlstrand (Lund University)
Solidarity in migrant worker mobilisation: Syndicalist unionisation in Sweden

Nicola Quondamatteo  (Università di Padova)
Organising on the margins of a multicultural company town: migrant labour, trade unions, and alternative solidarities in Monfalcone 

News

Publications

Journal Article - 2025

Communication creates partial organization: A comparative analysis of the organizing practices of two climate action movements, Youth for Climate and Fridays for Future Italy

Marco Deseriis, Lorenzo Zamponi, Diego Ceccobelli
This article focuses on a neglected aspect of the climate action movement Fridays for Future, namely, the relationship between its mediated communication practices and its early organizational processes. Drawing from a strand of organizational communication that underscores the constitutive dimension of communication to organizing processes, we analyze the significance of mediatized leadership and networked communication for the foundation and early development of two national chapters of Fridays for Future: Youth for Climate (YFC) Belgium and Fridays for Future Italy (FFFI).

Journal Article - 2023

Resisting right-wing populism in power: a comparative analysis of the Facebook activities of social movements in Italy and the UK

Niccolò Pennucci
This paper aims to present a comparative study of the civil society reaction to right-wing populism in power through social media, by looking at cases in Italy and the United Kingdom.

Journal Article - 2023

Emotions in Action: the Role of Emotions in Refugee Solidarity Activism

Chiara Milan
This article investigates the different types of emotions that result from participation in refugee solidarity activism, investigating how they change over time and to what extent they explain why individuals remain involved in action in spite of unfavorable circumstances.

Journal Article - 2023

‘Love is over, this is going to be Turkey!’: cathartic resonance between the June 2013 protests in Turkey and Brazil

Batuhan Eren
This study addresses the question of why and how a protest can inspire individuals in distant countries. Taking the June 2013 protests in Turkey and Brazil as cases, it investigates the reasons why the Turkish protests were framed as one of the inspirational benchmarks by some Brazilian protesters.

Journal Article - 2023

Mutual aid and solidarity politics in times of emergency: direct social action and temporality in Italy during the COVID-19 pandemic

Lorenzo Zamponi
From the spring of 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic and the social distancing measures introduced created a series of social problems and needs that were partially addressed in Italy as well as in other countries by grassroots mutual aid initiatives. While many of these initiatives were strongly rooted in the Italian social movement and civil society landscape and the choice to engage in mutual aid activities was the result of long years of reflection and planning, the article shows how strongly the temporality of emergency affected the nature of these initiatives, their development and their outcomes, in particular with regard to the extraordinary number of people who volunteered and their relationship with politicisation processes.

Monograph - 2023

Populism and (Pop) Music

Manuela Caiani, Enrico Padoan
The book provides a detailed account of the links between production of popular culture to the rise of populism and contributes to studies on populism and popular culture in Italy, using a comparative approach and a cultural sociology perspective

Monograph - 2022

Labour conflicts in the digital age

Donatella della Porta, Riccardo Emilio Chesta, Lorenzo Cini
From Deliveroo to Amazon, digital platforms have drastically transformed the way we work. But how are these transformations being received and challenged by workers? This book provides a radical interpretation of the changing nature of worker movements in the digital age, developing an invaluable approach that combines social movement studies and industrial relations. Using case studies taken from Europe and North America, it offers a comparative perspective on the mobilizing trajectories of different platform workers and their distinct organizational forms and action repertoires.

Monograph - 2022

Resisting the Backlash: Street Protest in Italy

Donatella della Porta, Niccolò Bertuzzi, Daniela Chironi, Chiara Milan, Martín Portos & Lorenzo Zamponi
Drawing interview material, together with extensive data from the authors’ original social movement database, this book examines the development of social movements in resistance to perceived political "regression" and a growing right-wing backlash.

Journal Article - 2021

Learning from Democratic Practices: New Perspectives in Institutional Design

Andrea Felicetti
Drawing from literature on democratic practices in social movements and democratic innovations, the article illustrates three ways to advance institutional design in the wake of the systemic turn.

Journal Article - 2021

Populism between voting and non-electoral participation

Andrea Pirro & Martín Portos
The article focuses on a neglected aspect of populist mobilisation, i.e. non-electoral participation (NEP), and elaborates on the extent to which populist party voters engage politically outside the polling station. While challenging common understandings of populism as inherently distrustful and apathetic, and protest as an exclusive practice of the left, the study critically places NEP at the heart of populism in general, and populist right politics in particular.