Strike: Informal communication within a sawmill on strike.

Description Usage Format Details Source References

Description

This undirected network contains the informal communication network between 24 striking sawmill workers (Michael 1997). See Details below.

Usage

1

Format

A undirected statnet network object with 24 nodes:

vertex.names

vertex attribute, name of striking worker.

group

vertex attribute, language/age group to which each vertex belongs, defined as follows: (1) Spanish-speaking workers under 30-years of age; (2) English-speaking workers under 30-years of age; and (3) English-speaking workers over 30. It should be noted that Alejandro also speaks some English, while Bob speaks some Spanish.

Details

The source link provides this description of the data:

“In a wood-processing facility, a new management team proposed changes to the workers' compensation package, which the workers did not accept. They started a strike, which led to a negotiation stalemate. Then, management asked an outsider to analyze the communication structure among the employees because it felt that information about the proposed changes was not effectively communicated to all employees by the union negotiators.

The outside consultant asked all employees to indicate the frequency in which they discussed the strike with each of their colleagues on a 5-point scale, ranging from ‘almost never’ (less then once per week) to ‘very often’ (several times per day). The consultant used three as a cut-off value. If at least one of two persons indicated that they discussed work with a frequency of three or more, a line between them was added to the informal communication network.

The network displays fairly stringent demarcations between groups defined on age and language. The Spanish-speaking young employees, who are of age 30 or younger, are almost disconnected from the English- speaking young employees, who communicate with no more than two of the older English-speaking employees.

All ties between groups have special backgrounds. Among the Hispanics, Alejandro is most proficient in English and Bob speaks some Spanish, which explains their tie. Bob owes Norm for getting his job and probably because of this, they developed a friendship tie. Finally, Ozzie is the father of Karl.”

Source

https://sites.google.com/site/ucinetsoftware/datasets/informalcommunicationwithinasawmillonstrike

References

Michael, Judd H. (1997), "Labor dispute reconciliation in a forest products manufacturing facility", Forest Products Journal, 47, 41–45.


jason-morgan/ina documentation built on Dec. 3, 2019, 7:12 a.m.