Surveillance, Spacing, Screaming and Scabbing: How Digital Technology Facilitates Union Busting

要旨

Despite high approval ratings for unions and growing worker interest in organizing, employees in the United States still face significant barriers to securing collective bargaining agreements. A key factor is employer counter-organizing: efforts to suppress unionization through rule changes, retaliation, and disruption. Designing sociotechnical tools and strategies to resist these tactics requires a deeper understanding of the role computing technologies play in counter-organizing against unionization. In this paper, we examine three high-profile organizing efforts–at Amazon, Starbucks, and Boston University–using publicly available sources to identify four recurring technological tactics: surveillance, spacing, screaming and scabbing. We analyze how these tactics operate across contexts, highlighting their digital dimensions and strategic deployment. We conclude with implications for organizing in digitally-mediated workplaces, directions for future research, and emergent forms of worker resistance.

著者
Frederick Reiber
Boston University, Boston, Massachusetts, United States
Nathan Chan-Yeong. Kim
University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, United States
Allison McDonald
Boston University, Boston, Massachusetts, United States
Dana Calacci
Penn State University, State College, Pennsylvania, United States

会議: CHI 2026

ACM CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems

セッション: Justice, Surveillance and Marginalized Identities

P1 - Room 119
7 件の発表
2026-04-16 20:15:00
2026-04-16 21:45:00