{"id":90066,"date":"2021-03-23T14:29:47","date_gmt":"2021-03-23T14:29:47","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/jacobinmag.com\/2021\/03\/italy-nationwide-amazon-strike-march-22\/"},"modified":"2021-03-23T14:58:21","modified_gmt":"2021-03-23T14:58:21","slug":"italys-amazon-strike-shows-how-workers-across-the-supply-chain-can-unite","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/radiofree.asia\/2021\/03\/23\/italys-amazon-strike-shows-how-workers-across-the-supply-chain-can-unite\/","title":{"rendered":"Italy\u2019s Amazon Strike Shows How Workers Across the Supply Chain Can Unite"},"content":{"rendered":"\n \n\n\n\n

Yesterday, Amazon workers in Italy held the first nationwide strike in the company\u2019s history. Jeff Bezos\u2019s firm has long used subcontracting, temporary hiring, and a maze of contracts to divide its workforce \u2014 but unionizing warehouse staff have made common cause with outsourced delivery drivers.<\/h3>\n\n\n
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\n Amazon workers demonstrate for better working conditions in front of a distribution center in Brandizzo, Piedmont, during yesterday's nationwide strike. Trade unions said 9,500 warehouse workers and 15,000 drivers participated across the country. (Nicol\u00f2 Campo\/LightRocket via Getty Images)\n <\/figcaption> \n<\/figure>\n\n\n\n\n \n

A year into a pandemic that has put them under ever more strain, yesterday, Amazon workers held a twenty-four-hour strike across Italy. In the first nationwide strike in the company’s history, workers mounted picket lines to protest exhausting work rates, despotic management-by-algorithm, and the company’s lack of accountability to its hires. The strike day was particularly historic because it involved all Amazon logistics workers, from warehouse employees to delivery drivers.<\/p>\n

An obvious key focus for the strike was Amazon’s large distribution centers (\u201cfulfillment centers\u201d) where thousands of goods are stocked, picked, and packed, yet the strike extended to the mid-range sortation centers (where boxes are dispatched) and the small “last mile” delivery stations. Decisively, it also included the drivers, who are outsourced and not recognized as Amazon employees, even though they work under the direct control of its algorithms.<\/p>\n

Claiming 75 percent participation, the one-day strike thus represented a historic moment for the labor movement \u2014 and for Amazon itself. Yet the struggle also needs to be extended, including to the international level, if it is to really hit Amazon\u2019s logistics operations and push back against the company’s most exploitative practices.<\/p>\n\n \n\n \n \n \n

Calling the Strike<\/h2>\n \n

The strike was called on March 10, after the sudden breaking off of negotiations between Amazon Italia Logistics (a subsidiary running operations in seven Italian fulfillment centers) and the logistics branch of the CGIL, CISL, and UIL union confederations. After two meetings back in January, unions expressed satisfaction that a discussion was underway. Yet the company made no concrete commitments on their specific demands, centered on a company-level collective agreement on working conditions, health and safety, work intensity, schedules, bonuses, and meal vouchers.<\/p>\n

The company could not have refused all<\/em> discussion. In Italy, trade unions still enjoy relatively strong institutional power: total membership is among the highest in Europe and unions are still influential in policy making. But, consistent with its classic strategy, Amazon worked to buy time rather than respond to union demands. Despite unions\u2019 optimism that they could negotiate traditional industrial relations in the firm, social dialogue turned out to be a dialogue of the deaf.<\/p>\n

The negotiations blew up two weeks ago at a meeting where the company refused to recognize its social responsibility toward subcontracted drivers. It issued a statement insisting that \u201cfor deliveries to customers, Amazon Logistics uses third-party suppliers. Therefore, we believe that the correct interlocutors are the suppliers of delivery services, as well as the business associations that represent them.\u201d The three unions blamed the company for the collapsednegotiations and declared a national strike \u2014 involving not only drivers but the entire national distribution network.<\/p>\n

In the past, the different working conditions in different parts of the logistical chain, as well as the different levels of union organization, had prevented any such nationwide strike. The earliest organizing took place at the Piacenza fulfillment center, opened in 2011. It took five years to unionize the first group of workers there, and in 2017, it was home to Italy’s first Amazon strike. The result was union recognition by management and the stipulation of a plant-level collective agreement on working time and night shifts.<\/p>\n

Since then, the unions’ strategy has been to extend this agreement to other areas, especially bonuses, health and safety, and information rights. But the company refused to seriously discuss these questions \u2014 and only conceded an annual renewal of the agreement on night shifts in 2019 and 2021. For both Italian and US Amazon management, the agreement following the first strike was only ever meant to be an exception. Moreover, the unions seemed either unwilling or unable to mobilize \u2014 nor were fulfillment center staff exactly putting irresistible pressure on them to do so.<\/p>\n\n \n \n \n

One Strike, Different Conditions<\/h2>\n \n

Yet the period following this first strike also saw Amazon’s Italian operations grow massively, through a vertical integration process which extended across all European countries.<\/p>\n