A trade union is a group of employees who join together to maintain and improve their conditions of employment. The typical activities of trade unions include providing assistance and services to their members, collectively bargaining for better pay and conditions for all workers, working to improve the quality of public services, political campaigning and industrial action.
Nearly seven million people in the UK belong to a trade union. Union members include nurses, school meals staff, hospital cleaners, professional footballers, shop assistants, teaching assistants, bus drivers, engineers and apprentices.
Most trade unions are independent of employers but have close working relationships with them.
This short guide will give you more information on:
Unions train and organise workplace representatives who help union members with the problems they face at work. Representatives provide support and advice and campaign for better conditions and pay.
Unions are credited with bringing about significant changes to society, including:
Unions have also made thousands of local agreements on issues affecting individual workplaces following consultation, negotiation and bargaining.
Most unions are structured as a network of local branches with reps in every workplace. Union reps:
In the UK trade unions have a special status in law which gives them special rights that professional associations don’t have. Employers have to work with a recognised union (however not all employers recognise a trade union and use employee representatives instead, see representative participation) to:
Union reps have the right to consult their members and employers. This means that, as a worker, you can have your say about workplace issues.
You cannot be punished by your employer if you join – or don’t join – a trade union.
In some countries around the world, trade unions are illegal. In some places, trade union activists are intimidated, threatened and sometimes killed just for trying to get fairer conditions for workers.
Representative participation refers to schemes in which employee representatives meet managers on a regular basis, whether in scheduled committees, or through more ad hoc arrangements. The essential feature is that participation is not directly with individual employees and their managers but mediated through the employee representatives. Approaches include:
In workplaces where there are unions, unions say members benefit from the strength and security that comes from working together to tackle problems. The major benefits are:
Trade unions may also represent their members’ interests outside the workplace. For example, trade unions may lobby the government or the European Union on policies which promote their objectives.