In this article, we draw international comparisons between industrial relations regimes in the hotel
sector and compare relevant trade union experiences in the selected metropolitan areas of Oslo,
Dublin, and Toronto. We ask how union strategies differ in these different hotel markets, and how
strategic choices at a local level relate to industrial relations models, regulatory change, and corporate
restructuring in the hotel market. The study is based on interviews with union representatives
and key informants in Norway, Ireland, and Canada. The main argument we make is that the reorientation
of union priorities and the willingness to engage in innovative strategies that has characterized
hotel unionism in Toronto and Dublin is not detectable in the case of Oslo. This might be a
result of the relatively strong position Norwegian trade unions have in national industrial relations,
but can at the same time leave local hotel unions vulnerable as they are facing low unionization
levels and corporate restructuring which they are unable to tackle effectively.
Author Biographies
Ann Cecilie Bergene, Work Research Institute, Oslo and Akershus University College of Applied
Sciences
Senior Researcher
David Jordhus-Lier, Department of Sociology and Human Geography, University of Oslo
Associate Professor
Anders Underthun, Work Research Institute, Oslo and Akershus University College of Applied
Sciences