Abstract
Current debates in social and political studies raise concerns about a ‘democratic deficit’ in society. Critical debates in work, employment and industrial relations raise similar concerns about intensified employer and managerial power and weak workers’ voice in substantive decision-making in organizations and workplaces. This article proposes that consideration of philosopher Étienne Balibar’s conceptions of post-national social citizenship, droit de cité, popular sovereignty and ‘worksites of democracy’ can usefully stimulate renewed discussion on substantive industrial and organizational democracy. The article argues that development of a radically social citizenship disrupts the hegemony of liberal notions of ownership and of employment contractual relations. Expansive social citizenship enables emancipatory movement beyond congealed adversarial conventions and towards a democracy understood as continually reflexive cooperation. The article illustratively addresses theoretical and practical implications for the regulation of work, employee participation and corporate governance, especially in European companies.
Get full access to this article
View all access options for this article.
