TY - JOUR
T1 - Who Is a Worker? Partisanship, the National Labor Relations Board, and the Social Content of Employment
AU - Tomassetti, Julia
PY - 2012/9
Y1 - 2012/9
N2 - In opinions addressing whether graduate students, medical residents, and disabled workers in nonstandard work arrangements are employees under the National Labor Relations Act, I analyze partisan differences in how National Labor Relations Board members, under the previous two US presidents, confronted the contradictory permeation of wage-labor into relatively noncommodified relationships. I argue that Republicans mediated the contradictions by interpreting indicia of employer property rights as status authority. They constructed employment as a contractual relationship consummated through exchange relations and demarcated a nonmarket social sphere in which to locate the relationships before them. This construction suppressed the class dimension of employment and the connection between relations of production and relations in production (Burawoy 1979). Democrats mediated the contradictions by recognizing them in part and arguing that the workers were engaged in commodity production. They proposed the Act as a means for workers to negotiate "differentiated ties" (Zelizer 2005) in nonstandard employment. © 2012 American Bar Foundation.
AB - In opinions addressing whether graduate students, medical residents, and disabled workers in nonstandard work arrangements are employees under the National Labor Relations Act, I analyze partisan differences in how National Labor Relations Board members, under the previous two US presidents, confronted the contradictory permeation of wage-labor into relatively noncommodified relationships. I argue that Republicans mediated the contradictions by interpreting indicia of employer property rights as status authority. They constructed employment as a contractual relationship consummated through exchange relations and demarcated a nonmarket social sphere in which to locate the relationships before them. This construction suppressed the class dimension of employment and the connection between relations of production and relations in production (Burawoy 1979). Democrats mediated the contradictions by recognizing them in part and arguing that the workers were engaged in commodity production. They proposed the Act as a means for workers to negotiate "differentiated ties" (Zelizer 2005) in nonstandard employment. © 2012 American Bar Foundation.
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UR - https://www.scopus.com/record/pubmetrics.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84867648621&origin=recordpage
U2 - 10.1111/j.1747-4469.2012.01314.x
DO - 10.1111/j.1747-4469.2012.01314.x
M3 - RGC 21 - Publication in refereed journal
SN - 0897-6546
VL - 37
SP - 815
EP - 847
JO - Law and Social Inquiry
JF - Law and Social Inquiry
IS - 4
ER -