TY - JOUR
T1 - Social media, democracy, and the labor movement
T2 - How battles for control on Facebook affect unions
AU - Hau, Mark Friis
AU - Hansen, Nana Wesley
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - This article explores the transformative power of social media communication in the labor movement, with a specific focus on how online grassroots activism influences union democracy. We argue that communicative challenges online from the unions’ own grassroots result in unions revitalizing their on- and offline member communication, which strengthens union democracy. Through a mixed-methods approach including quantitative analysis of Facebook interactions and qualitative interviews with union representatives and grassroots activists, we examine the evolving dynamics between unions and their grassroots members across Danish collective bargaining rounds in 2017 and 2020. We find that while unions and their grassroots share internal connections, they exhibit divergent objectives and strategies in their social media use. Our analysis reveals that grassroots activists initially held a significant advantage in online communication, but unions have gradually bridged this gap. Crucially, when grassroots activism posed threats to their power base, unions responded with innovative communication strategies both online and offline, which served to bolster internal union democracy. Our findings show the profound influence of social media on labor organizations and the democratic process, shedding new light on contemporary evolutions of union democracy.
AB - This article explores the transformative power of social media communication in the labor movement, with a specific focus on how online grassroots activism influences union democracy. We argue that communicative challenges online from the unions’ own grassroots result in unions revitalizing their on- and offline member communication, which strengthens union democracy. Through a mixed-methods approach including quantitative analysis of Facebook interactions and qualitative interviews with union representatives and grassroots activists, we examine the evolving dynamics between unions and their grassroots members across Danish collective bargaining rounds in 2017 and 2020. We find that while unions and their grassroots share internal connections, they exhibit divergent objectives and strategies in their social media use. Our analysis reveals that grassroots activists initially held a significant advantage in online communication, but unions have gradually bridged this gap. Crucially, when grassroots activism posed threats to their power base, unions responded with innovative communication strategies both online and offline, which served to bolster internal union democracy. Our findings show the profound influence of social media on labor organizations and the democratic process, shedding new light on contemporary evolutions of union democracy.
KW - Collective bargaining
KW - Mobilization
KW - Social media communication
KW - Union democracy
KW - Union grassroots
KW - Collective bargaining
KW - Mobilization
KW - Social media communication
KW - Union democracy
KW - Union grassroots
U2 - 10.1177/00221856241307348
DO - 10.1177/00221856241307348
M3 - Journal article
AN - SCOPUS:105000206249
SN - 0022-1856
VL - OnlineFirst
JO - Journal of Industrial Relations
JF - Journal of Industrial Relations
ER -