Archive - English
report | prols 1/2005
Community struggles in South Africa
There are struggles against the
evictions and water and electricity cut offs going on across South Africa. These
are typically self-organised and openly antagonistic. This is an overview of
those struggles and a report of a successful wildcat strike in an oil refinery.
It reports the ‘struggle electricians’ who reconnect their neighbours' cut-off
power; the women who blockade narrow flights of stairs in their tenement
buildings to prevent cops from carrying out evictions; the entire communities
that react to the arrival of new water meters by revolting, smashing the meters
and chasing away the installers. It is “first and foremost an account from the
frontlines of the establishment’s undeclared war on the poor. It is, I am told,
a heart-warming report because the war no longer seems to be one-sided”. As this
is a longer piece it is available as a downloadable pdf - either as an A5 booklet
(print on both sides of A4 and fold in half) or normal A4
format.
report | prols
11/2003
wildcat
strike by postal workers in britain
The wildcat strike began at the end of October 2003 in, at
the same time and independently, at Greenford mail centre, which was a knock on
from a dispute at the nearby delivery office at Southall and at an office in
Dartford, London, after a driver refused to deliver the letters that were
building up due to the official strike, to another office with other workers. He
was sacked for this and his 400 colleagues reacted immediately with a
spontaneous work stoppage. The management ensured the spread of the strike by
attempting to take the post to other offices. The management knew it was a
provocation, but reckoned without such decisive action. More...
report | prols 7/2003
strike
in schools in marseilles
By the author: "This text is an account of one week of
strikes among casual workers in schools in Marseilles, within the context of a
small movement of casual workers in education. Similar 'movements' took place
around the country, but due to the failure to organize a national co-ordination
of strike committees information from other cities was hard to come by. In the
introduction I try to explain the public services in France, their
casualisation, and the role of casual labour within education. In the conclusion
I give a few brief assessments of the central features of the struggle and its
internal contradictions." more...
reports | prols 2/2003
tram
drivers' strike in prague
The tram-drivers in Prague went on strike in January - as
many other bus-, metro- or tramdrivers in other countries and cities recently.
Behind these struggles lies the attack on wages and conditions as part of the
so-called privatization. Comrades in Prague went to the picket line and tried to
understand the chances and limits of the struggle. More...
interview/leaflet | prols 12/2002
fire
fighters in britain on strike
This is the summary of an interview we have made end of November 2002 with a firefighter from Belfast who is also a
representative of the FBU (Fire Brigade Union). More...
report | prols 11/2002
everyday
resistance in a swedish bakery
For almost two years I was employed at a bakery in southern
Sweden, together with about 160 others; bakers, cleaners and mechanics included.
From the first day of work, I was told that the bakery was under the threat to
be closed down, and, indeed, with time, we got dismissed and the bakery shut
down. Of course this affected the mood and ways of struggle at the bakery, and
may be worth to keep in mind while reading the text. More...
report | prols 11/2002
struggle
against value in a swedish hamburger restaurant
My last job was at a private owned
hamburger restaurant. Although the restaurant didn?t belong to any multinational
company like McDonalds or Burgerking, it was rather big and was open every day
in the week only closed between 7 and 10 in the morning. Most of the people who
worked there were teenagers or people like me in the twenties, and there were
mainly girls. The majority had another job or went to school the same time as
they worked at the restaurant. It came and went people all the time at the
restaurant, people didn?t cope with the work conditions or they thought that the
wage was too lousy. The majority of the staff was employed illegally and one had
too work more than a year to get an ordinary contract and an ordinary wage.
More...
report | prols 11/2002
call
centre in athens/greece
Teleprime is a call centre company which sells mobile
phones and, more importantly, issues credit cards. In the interview me and a
couple more people were told a number f usual shit about the company, we were
spoken too in the usual "friendly" but also "serious" and "strict" way, we were
asked what we expected to get from the company, while mention was obviously made
to all those in the company which had "made it" and earned lots of money and to
those who had not been able to feel part of the company and had left soon. In
exactly the same way as in any other call centre, Teleprime personnel claimed
that they do not have a high turnover because conditions are good. Bullshit.
More...
report | prols 10/2002
fiat-call centre in milano
At the beginning everything looks really
nice when you enter Fiat's call centre in Milan. Lots of space, multi-coloured
cubicle walls and little flags, lots of young people sitting in front of large
monitors, wandering around or relaxing and smoking in the corner by the vending
machines. They speak all kinds of languages: Italian, French, German, Spanish,
Dutch, Polish... Something between an internet cafe, a children's day care
centre and one of those newsrooms in an American TV soap. More...
report | prols 7/2002
being a
mcworker in germany
McDonald's is used by some people as a symbol of 'evil multi-national
American imperialist culture'. But in reality it only has a different face from
any other employer. Working for wages is (!) exploitation, be it in McDonald's
or an organic bread shop. More...
leaflet | prols 7/2002
strike
in the cleaning-sector in paris (and milano)
Behind the beautiful new clean
service-sector society, behind the spotless hotel rooms, offices, conference
halls, supermarkets, train stations and administrative centres hides the crappy
jobs and miserable wages. Alongside the workers who come from Europe, there are
huge numbers of immigrants working too, from Turkey, Eastern Europe, Southern
Africa and the Maghreb States. The companies hope to use the often precarious
living situations (insecure temporary-resident status, a poor knowledge of the
German language, no recognised qualifications) to divide and intimidate the
workers. But work is also the place where people come together and discuss the
shit conditions. More...
leaflet | prols 3/2002
workers
occupy nokia-factory near milano
This is a leaflet on the actions of the workers of
Nokia-Nextrom who have occupied the factory in order to prevent the closure.
Officially they carry on working - also in order to get paid - but actually they
are doing work-to-rule... More...
report | prols 3/2002
experiences of a waitress in germany
This was written to share the experience
of one waitress with others. We often work in small places for short times, but
if we all stand together we have a chance to fight back against the crap we get
at work.. This starts with sharing what is going on... There are lots of us
working in insecure, part time, cash-in-hand service and catering jobs. We are
often fairly isolated. We all put up with similar stuff, but it seems like each
thing is a one-off incident. Well it's not... Here is one story and some
thoughts. More...
report/leaflet | prols 2/2002
struggle
of the railways' cleaning workers in italy
On Monday and Tuesday last week
cleaning-workers have organised actions on the railway stations in Rome,
Palermo, Milano, Florence, Bologna, Naples... in order to prevent the announced
dismissals, wage cuts and deterioration of working conditions. The state-owned
railway trust FS - meanwhile divided in several companies - has put the cleaning
contracts out for tender. The cleaning itself is being done by several private
companies. End of December should have been the dicision on the new contracts.
The FS had announced that it would cut the budget for cleaning by about 40
percent. The dicision was then postponed till end of February. The actions of
the workers aimed at forcing the private companies to take back the reduction of
the budget and the announced dismissals. More...
report | wildcat 7/2001
refusing collection
In the week between the 11th and the 15th of June a
workers' struggle of a kind not experienced in the UK for a long time took place
in the refuse collection depot in Brighton. In defiance of the dominant
spectacle of social peace, the bin men of Brighton took collective action after
being sacked for refusing newly imposed work routines. Quickly, their struggle
took the character of a complete refusal to continue working under the same
management, passively embracing a large part of the community of Brighton. After
4 days occupation, the workers managed to win their struggle and to force the
Council to terminate the private contract, while re-instating all the workers
who had been sacked. More...

