Vigilance Committee (trade Union)

A vigilance committee is an unofficial grouping within a trade union, formed for the purpose of putting pressure on that union's leadership to pursue alternative policies or to pursue existing policies with increased vigour. Vigilance committees are usually formed when large numbers of union members disagree with the union's official policy, believe that they cannot trust the leadership to protect their interests properly, or that it is necessary for union members to scrutinise the actions of the leadership. In the United Kingdom, vigilance committees were widespread during the 1920s, appearing, for example, amongst seamen, dockers and railwaymen. These vigilance committees were influenced by communist militants of the National Minority Movement. Vigilance committees were also common in 1940s or 1950s, although by this stage most such bodies did not use the term vigilance committee, preferring alternate terms such as Reform Movement.


Trade unions and organized labor
  • Trade union (Public sector)
  • Labor history
  • Labor rights
  • labour movement
Formation
Structure
  • Labour council
  • Union organizer
  • National trade union center
  • Global union federation
  • Union representative
  • Clerk of the Chapel
  • Father of the Chapel
  • Local union
  • Union dues
  • Vigilance committee
  • union label
  • Salt
  • Trades Hall
  • duty of fair representation
Models
  • Organising model
  • Service model
  • rank and file
  • Social Movement Unionism
  • Community unionism
  • One Big Union
  • Open-source unionism
  • Business unionism
  • Dual unionism
  • Solidarity unionism
Types
  • Company union
  • Independent union
  • General union
  • Professional association
Industrial relations
Shops and hiring
  • closed shop
  • open shop
  • Agency shop
  • Union shop
  • Hiring hall
  • Bump
  • scope clause
Actions
  • Strike action (Recognition, Secondary)
  • strike notice
  • Occupation of factories
  • Precarious work
  • Precarity
  • Sitdown strike
  • Slowdown
  • Bossnapping
  • Stay away
  • Labor unrest
  • Industrial unrest
  • Grievance
  • Occupation of factories
  • Organizational dissent
  • Overtime ban
  • Industrial action
  • Walkout
  • Art strike
  • Contingent work
  • Contingent workforce
  • Whipsaw strike
  • Wildcat strike action
  • Work-to-rule
  • Green ban
  • Picketing
Bargaining
  • collective bargaining
  • collaborative bargaining
  • Mutual gains bargaining
  • Pattern bargaining
  • bargaining unit
  • Union security agreement
  • Master contract
  • Enterprise bargaining agreement
Compensation
  • Strike pay
  • Union wage premium
  • Worker's compensation
Reactions and controversy
  • Opposition to trade unions
  • Labor spies
  • Union busting
  • Givebacks
  • Churn and burn
  • Paper local
  • Anti-union violence
  • Union violence
  • Big labor
  • Demarcation dispute
  • Strikebreaker
  • Goon squad
  • featherbedding
Other topics
  • International comparisons of labor unions
  • Labour code
  • Labour law
  • Labour organization law
  • Eight-hour day

Famous quotes containing the words vigilance and/or committee:

    I met a Californian who would
    Talk California—a state so blessed
    He said, in climate, none had ever died there
    A natural death, and Vigilance Committees
    Had had to organize to stock the graveyards
    And vindicate the state’s humanity.
    Robert Frost (1874–1963)

    In inner-party politics, these methods lead, as we shall yet see, to this: the party organization substitutes itself for the party, the central committee substitutes itself for the organization, and, finally, a “dictator” substitutes himself for the central committee.
    Leon Trotsky (1879–1940)