Department of Social Security Work-In: Difference between revisions

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{{Infobox_event|title = Department of Social Security Work-In|image = 300px-Main entrance to FaHCSIA offices March 2013.jpg|imagecaption = A modern office of the Department of Social Services, the modern descendant of the Department of Social Security.|date = 1980|location = Australia}}The '''Department of Social Security Work-In''' was an episode of [[Workers' Self-Management|workers' control]] in [[Australia]] in [[Timeline of Libertarian Socialism in Oceania|1980]]. White-collar workers organized in the Administrative and Clerical Officers’ Association who were employed in the federal Department of Social Security staged a series of [[Work-In|work-ins]]. In 1980, they decided against a “traditional work-in” and instead backed up their demand for improved staffing levels by refusing—for more than two years—to recover overpayments made to social security recipients, which cost the federal government many millions of dollars.<ref>[[Immanuel Ness]] (2014) [[New Forms of Worker Organization: The Syndicalist and Autonomist Restoration of Class Struggle Unionism]] - Chapter 10: Doing without the boss: Workers' Control Experiments in Australia in the 1970s.</ref>
{{Infobox_event|title = Department of Social Security Work-In|image = 300px-Main entrance to FaHCSIA offices March 2013.jpg|imagecaption = A modern office of the Department of Social Services, the modern descendant of the Department of Social Security.|date = 1980|location = Australia}}The '''Department of Social Security Work-In''' was an episode of [[Workers' Self-Management|workers' control]] in [[Australia]] in [[Timeline of Libertarian Socialism in Oceania|1980]]. White-collar workers organized in the Administrative and Clerical Officers’ Association who were employed in the federal [[Welfare State|Department of Social Security]] staged a series of [[Work-In|work-ins]]. In 1980, they decided against a “traditional work-in” and instead backed up their demand for improved staffing levels by refusing—for more than two years—to recover overpayments made to social security recipients, which cost the federal government many millions of dollars.<ref>[[Immanuel Ness]] (2014) [[New Forms of Worker Organization: The Syndicalist and Autonomist Restoration of Class Struggle Unionism]] - Chapter 10: Doing without the boss: Workers' Control Experiments in Australia in the 1970s.</ref>


== See Also ==
== See Also ==

Revision as of 15:02, 31 May 2019

</image> <label>Performers</label> <label>Date</label> <label>Location</label> </infobox>The Department of Social Security Work-In was an episode of workers' control in Australia in 1980. White-collar workers organized in the Administrative and Clerical Officers’ Association who were employed in the federal Department of Social Security staged a series of work-ins. In 1980, they decided against a “traditional work-in” and instead backed up their demand for improved staffing levels by refusing—for more than two years—to recover overpayments made to social security recipients, which cost the federal government many millions of dollars.[1]

See Also

References

  1. Immanuel Ness (2014) New Forms of Worker Organization: The Syndicalist and Autonomist Restoration of Class Struggle Unionism - Chapter 10: Doing without the boss: Workers' Control Experiments in Australia in the 1970s.