College and Research Libraries THOMAS W. SHAUGHNESSY Participative Management, Collective Bargaining, and Professionalism This paper attempts to analyze participative management and collec- tive bargaining as strategies for attaining certain goals. A distinction is drawn between those goals (needs) which all employees have in common and those which characterize only professional workers. The effectiveness of each strategy is then discussed, with examples taken from professions other than librarianship. IN AN EDITORIAL appearing in College & Research Libraries, Richard DeGen- naro stated: One of the legacies of the protest movement of the last several years has been a certain restlessness and search- ing on the part of librarians for a greater. role in the decision-making process in their libraries and a voice in the conditions of their employment. Two powerful ideas and trends have begun to emerge out of this confused and stressful situation: participative management and unionization. 1 Since this editorial appeared, a con- siderable amount of library literature has been devoted to these two topics. But ·despite the wealth of literature, very little effort seems to have been de- voted to relating the two ideas. The question that needs to be addressed is not how to achieve participative man- agement (or neutralize staff interest in unionization), but why are profession- als interested at all in participative man- agement or collective bargaining. Some of the literature on this topic would seem to suggest that participative Thomas W. Shaughnessy is Associate Dean, School of Library Science, U niver- sity of Southern California, Los Angeles. 140 I management is an end in itself, and that in some cases collective bargaining through unionization is a means ( of last resort?) of attaining that goal. If we accept this view, however, we are faced with having to explain the fact that participative management existed long before the unionization of profes- sional employees, that collective bargain- ing is a phenomenon that historically addressed economic issues as distin- guished from managerial and policy questions, and that collective bargaining inevitably sharpens the distinction be- tween labor and management and places this relationship in an adversary con- text. Then there is the concern which has been expressed by . a few academic li- brarians that participative management may have adverse effects on the quality of service delivery inasmuch as the pro- ductivity of professional staff may de- crease due to the proportion of time spent participating through committees, task forces, and strategy groups.2 It is the hypothesis of this paper that among professional staff neither partici- pative management nor collective bar- gaining is an end in itself, but that these are mechanisms for attaining cer- tain goals which are basic to all profes- sions. EMPLOYEE NEEDS AND GoALS To a certain extent all employees, re- gardless of their positions, hold in com- mon certain objectives and needs. These were first described by Maslow and then elaborated upon by McGregor. 3• 4 But professionals are distinguished from other workers by the intensity with which they seek to satisfy certain of these needs, by the particular mix of work-related values that will provide op- timum satisfaction, and by the hier- archy of these needs. In general, professionals as a group have a stronger attachment to their work and expect to derive more from it than do non-professionals. For most professionals, work is more than just a job. Consequently, it is possible to dis- tinguish between the goals that profes- sionals seek to achieve in their jobs and careers and those of other workers. 5 Kleingartner, in a study conducted in 1967, distinguished between Level I and Level II goals.6 Level I goals may be de- fined as those relating to fairly short- term job rewards such as wages or salaries, working conditions, fair treat- ment, fringe benefits, and some measure of job security. These are the issues typically addressed by the collective bar- gaining process. These bread and butter issues are common to all categories of workers, regardless of education, func- tion, or status. Level II goals, in contrast, may be de- fined as longer term professional goa~s. They are not generally held by non-pro- fessionals as realistically attainable ob- jectives. But for professionals, these goals are centrally related to the content and mission of the functions per- formed by the various professions. It is interesting to note that these goals rarely become concrete issues or objec- tives until Level I goals are adequately met. Much of the substance of Level II goals can be encompassed by the con- cepts of ( 1) professional autonomy, or Participative Management I 141 the right to determine how a function . is to be performed; ( 2) professional in- tegrity and identification, as distin- guished from loyalty to institutional or organizational structures; ( 3) individ- ual satisfaction and career development, including control over decisions affect- ing one's work and career; and ( 4) eco- nomic security and enhancement, that is rewards should reflect not so much the contribution made to the employing organization directly, but the quality of service rendered. 7 It is important to note that the at- tainment of these objectives would give professionals a real, as distinguished from symbolic, voice in determining some of the policies of the organiza- tions in which they work. pARTICIPATIVE MANAGEMENT If it is true that librarians and mem- bers of other professions aspire by rea- son of their status to achieve Level II goals, what are the means which have been successfully used to attain them? Non-professional workers have typical- ly attempted to achieve their objectives through either collective bargaining or legislation. Despite the fact that the unionization of professionals has been a fairly recent occurrence, there is con- siderable evidence that collective bar- gaining can be used to achieve Level II goals as well. The use of other strategies to achieve these ends, such as legislative processes and lobbying, has a much longer history. But in addition to these tactics, pro- fessionals have available to themselves at least two other means: professional standards and participative manage- ment.s It would be impossible within the scope of this paper to discuss all of these strategies. The attempt to use stan- dards of professional service (which theoretically at least should define the quality of service to be provided to so- ciety) to achieve self-serving, profes- sion-directed objectives is an extremely interesting phenomenon which appears 142 I College & Research Libraries • March 1977 to have special relevance to librarian- ship. However, this strategy, along with legislative processes, will not be dis- cussed here. As a mechanism for achieving Level II goals, participative management would appear to be the more attractive strategy for librarians. There are sev- eral obvious as well as subtle arguments to support this view. The first is that it is the professional- ism of an individual which is more im- portant than his or her office in an organization. In other words, all librari- ans, regardless of rank, have a harmony of interests, a service ideal, a funda- mental identity. This would appear to be a basic assumption of the American Library Association. As is the case with many other professional organizations, the ALA has fostered an attitude of co- operation between employer and em- ployee. According to this view, improved communication, consultation, and edu- cation of its members through associa- tion programs work to solidify and strengthen the bonds of common con- cern. 9 That this is also a typical man- agement view should not be surprising if one considers the fact that ALA lead- ership posts are so often filled by library administrators. Undoubtedly, most librarians and li- . brary administrators would agree that fundamentally they share responsibility for developing the field of librarian- ship and for providing effective service. However, many employers and adminis- trators have used the concept of harmony of interests as a basis for attack- ing efforts of salaried professionals to organize. This tactic mistakenly tends to equate professionalism with loyalty to management. 10 At the very least, it implies that librarians who attempt to bargain collectively are acting unprofes- sionally. A second advantage that participative management has over collective bargain- ing as a goal attainment strategy is the notion that it increases both staff morale and productivity.11 It would appear that the Association of Research Libraries~ Management Review and Analysis Pro- gram is based at least in part on this as- sumption.12 Evidence does indeed exist which supports the relationship between participative management and job satis- :Faction.13 The influence of participa- tive management on productivity, how- ever, is far less certain.14 A third, but not widely recognized, advantage of participative management is that it facilitates both the socializa- tion of professionals who are insuffi- ciently normative and the co-optation of those who either have leadership qualities and/ or professional loyalties which are greater than their institution- al allegiances. For the upwardly mobile, cosmopolitan professionals, 15 participa- tive management is a much more pal- atable means of achieving Level II goals than is collective bargaining. Indeed, to the extent that professionals allow themselves to be co-opted (hereby win- ning the approval of superiors and pos- sibly recognition within informal power networks), the more rapidly will they rise through the ranks and achieve not only their professional goals but greater economic benefits (Level I goals) as well . Participative management as a strate- gy is further enhanced by its reliance upon the academic or collegial model with its attendant committee structure. Organized as a community of scholars, college and university faculty dominate educational policy matters and, in many instances, exert a major influence on col- lege organizational structure.16 For the most part, however, libraries are or- ganized as hierarchical, bureaucratic structures which would have to undergo radical change if they were to complete- ly adopt the collegial model.17 The or- ganizational stresses and strains which occur when collegial approaches are in- troduced into hierarchical structures have been partially described by Mc- Anally and Downs. Is One of the characteristics of the aca- demic model-the ubiquitous commit- tee-has been used as a mechanism for providing opportunities for participa- tive management. But there is an impor- tant distinction between consultative and advisory processes on the one hand and actual decision-making processes on the other. The committee structure fa- cilitates the achievement of the former, but attainment of Level II goals would seem to require the latter. COLLECI'IVE BARGAINING A second strategy for achieving Level II goals is collective bargaining. The moral, legal, or professional aspects of the unionization of professionals would appear to be a dead issue. Physicians have formed unions (and have actually gone on strike) ;19 lawyers have formed unions; 20 and many teachers,21 social workers,22 and nurses23 are also members of various unions. Consequently, it will be assumed that collective bargaining is an appropriate strategy for librarians as well. Historically, labor unions have been primarily concerned with improving the economic status of their members. Fre- quently economic issues will also be of concern to organized salaried profes- sionals, at least in the early stages of the employee-employer relationship. How- ever the logic of professionalism will not allow a union to ignore for long the Level II goals of its members. The more professional the orientation of the oc- cupation involved, the sooner it will begin focusing on Level II types of con- cems.24 Whereas participative management has a number of advantages from an organizational viewpoint as well as from that of the upwardly mobile, in- Participative Management I 143 c:lividual professional, collective bar- gaining from the outset establishes an adversary relationship between labor and management. In participative man- agement, management permits employ- ees to share gradually in management prerogatives and power, but in collective bargaining the employees decide to share in certain decision-making pro- cesses, regardless of management's atti- tude or posture. The latter is a power relationship. The resolution of differ- ences between union and management rests on the balance of the relative bar- gaining powers of the two parties. This power aspect of industrial relations is both fundamental and inescapable.25 For librarians and members of other professions and semi-professions, collec- tive bargaining raises a number of im- portant questions. First, how will the bargaining unit be determined? Will it be comprised of librarians only? If the answer is affirmative, then one must con- sider whether there are a sufficient num- ber of librarians in the unit to be ef- fective. Frequently, librarians work within a larger, heteronomous organiza- tional setting and do not constitute ei- ther a large num her or percentage of the employees. As a result, in some uni- versities librarians find themselves grouped with teaching faculty; in pub- lic libraries, sometimes with other li- brary personnel. In such situations, it may be difficult for librarians to achieve those goals which are derived primarily from their own professionalism. Perhaps librarians who find them- selves in this situation view collective bargaining as a device not for achieving their Level II goals, but for merely achieving some degree of participative management. It is questionable, how- ever, whether this is a viable objective. It seems likely that collective bargaining would polarize labor and management, and thereby reduce opportunities for professionals in decision-making pro- cesses. 144 /.College & Research Libraries • March 1977 CoLLECTIVE BARGAINING IN RELATED PROFESSIONS Related to these concerns is a second major question whiCh must be resolved; namely, what is the proper scope of bar- gaining for professional employees? Scope of bargaining is defined in legisla- tion regulating the collective bargaining process. The National Labor Relations Act speaks of bargaining "with respect to wages, hours, and other terms and conditions of employment.''26 Legisla- tion which confers upon public employ- ees the right to bargain generally contains similar language.27 For many professionals the phrase, "terms and conditions of employment," has been translated into policy-making power over all professional practice. 28 For example, the National Education Association's position is as follows: A professional group has responsibili- ties beyond self-interest, including a responsibility for the general welfare of the school system. Teachers and other members of the professional staff have an interest in the conditions which attract and retain a superior teaching force, in in-service training programs, in class size, in the selection ·of textbooks, and in other matters which go far beyond those which would be included in a narrow defini- tion _of working conditions. Negotia- tions should include all matters which affect the quality of the educational system. 29 Under this broad definition of scope of bargaining, teachers would appear to have the right to negotiate issues which might properly be called matters of educational policy. And insofar as matters of educational policy directly relate to the mission and function of the teaching profession, they constitute Level II goals. Members of the nursing profession are also turning to collective bargaining as a means for achieving their profes- sional goals. For example, the 1974 San Francisco nurses strike may have estab- lished a precedent in hospital labor re- lations because it was the first time that "matters of patient care and nursing performance took priority over matters of a strictly financial or economic na- ture."30 This episode may have great significance for nurses inasmuch as the scope of bargaining has been broadened to include issues once thought to be non-negotiable, such as staffing and quality of patient care. Professionals working in other hu- man service industries are also attempt- ing to influence decisions affecting the nature and quality of services provided. The curators of New York's Museum of Modem Art went on strike because, among other things, they objected to a reduction in the number of annual ex- hibits.31 New York's social service em- ployees negotiated the improvement of welfare services to clients as well as a 25 percent increase in welfare benefits.32 And social workers in Los Angeles County successfully negotiated a reduc- tion in case loads, contending that such a reduction would result in improved professional services. 33 Examples could also be drawn from the medi9al and legal professions to il- lustrate the same trend-the use of col- lective bargaining by professionals to attain professional goals. But the ex- amples presented from the fields of ed- ucation, social work, and nursing are especially relevant to librarianship. All might be categorized as semi-profes- sions; none has full professional status. Most practitioners in these fields work in organizational settings; they are not as independent or autonomous as those with full professional status. And in all of these fields, women would seem to comprise the majority of the practition- ers. Admittedly, librarianship differs from these fields in a number of significant respects: for example, the range in types of librarians, the structure of the field's professional organization, the difficulty in defining and measuring the product or services rendered. Then there is the possibility that perhaps librarians are already achievihg their professional goals without resorting to the strategy of collective bargaining. This is, of course, a possibility, but it is very un- likely in view of the fact that, first, it is very difficult to document specific ex- amples of such achievement outside the collective bargaining framework, and, secondly, the bureaucratization of li- brary services would appear to inhibit rather than facilitate the achievement of Level II goals. 34 The issues raised here are extremely complex, and do not permit easy resolu- ·. Participative Management I 145 tion. The existence of state legislation concerning public employees, the influ- ence of civil service regulations, the dif- ferences deriving from public sector versus private sector employment, and the potential role of state and regional library associations are important and very relevant issues which have not been addressed. What has been suggested is that the two major strategies have not been equally effective in achieving pro- fessional goals and that both ap- proaches, even when effective, may be accompanied by unanticipated and sometimes dysfunctional side effects. REFERENCES 1. Richard DeGennaro, "Participative Man- agement or Unionization?'' College & Re- search Libraries 33: 173 (May 1972). 2. Beverly P. Lynch, "Organizational Struc- ture and the Academic Library," Illinois Libraries 56:201 (March 1974). 3. A. H. Maslow, "A Theory of Human Moti- vation," Psychological Review 50:370-96 (July 1943). 4. Douglas McGregor, "The Human Side of Enterprise," in V. H. Vroom and E. L. Aece, eds., Management and Motivation (New York: Penguin, 1970). 5. Archie Kleingartner, "Collective Bargain- ing between Salaried Professionals and Public Sector Management," Public Admin- istration Review 33:166 (March/ April 1973). 6. Archie Kleingartner, Professionalism and Salaried Worker Organization (Madison, Wis.: Industrial Relations Research Insti- tute, Univ. of Wisconsin, 1967). 7. Kleingartner, "Collective Bargaining," p.167. 8. Participative management is defined as a mental and emotional involvement of a person in a group situation which encour- ages him or her to contribute to group goals and to share responsibility in them. It suggests ego involvement as distin- guished from mere task involvement. See Keith Davis, Human Relations at Work: The Dynamics of Organizational Behavior (New York: McGraw-Hill, 1967), p.128. 9. Archie Kleingartner and Jean R. Kennelly, "Employee Relations in Libraries: The Current Scene," in Allerton Park Institute, 20th, 1974, Collective Barga·ining in Li- braries, edited by Frederick A. Schlipf (Urbana-Champaign: Univ. of Illiiiois, Graduate School of Library Scimace, 1975), p.8-10. 10. Ibid., p.7. .... 11. Maurice P. Marchant, "Participative Man- agement as Related to Personnel Develop- ment," Library Trends 20:48-59 (July 1971 ). 12. Duane Webster, "The Management Review and Analysis Program: An Assisted Self- Study to Secure Constructive Change in the Management of Research Libraries," College & Research Libraries 35: 114-25 (March 1974). 13. Davis, Human Relations at Work, p.l34. •14. Beverly P. Lynch, "Participative Manage- ment in Relation to Library Effectiveness," College & Research Libraries 33:382-90 (Sept. 1972). 15. Alvin W. Gouldner, "Cosmopolitans and Locals: Toward an Analysis of Latent So- cial Roles," Administrative Science Quar- terly 2:281-306 (Dec. 1957). 16. Joseph Garbarino, "Professional Negotia- tions in Education," Industrial Relations 7: 99 (Feb. 1968). 17. H. William Axford, "An Overlooked Cost of Achieving a Participatory Environment," C oUege & Research Libraries 35:5-6 (Jan. 1974). 18. Arthur M. McAnally and Robert B. Downs, "The Changing Role of Directors of U ni- .versity Libraries," College & Research Li- 146 I College & Research Libraries • March 1977 braries 34:103-25 (March 1973). 19. John Kralewski, "Collective Bargaining among Professional Employees," Hospital Administration 19:30-41 (Summer 1974). 20. "The Unionization of Attorneys," Colum- bia Law Review 71:100-17 (Jan. 1971 ). 21. William R. Hazard, ''Collective Bargaining and School Governance," Southwestern University Law Review 5:83-117 ( Spring 1973). 22. Jerome Lefkowitz, "Unionism in the Hu- man Service Industries," Albany Law Re- view 36:603-31 (Winter 1972). 23. Ada Jacox, "Collective Action and Control of Practice by Professionals;' Nursing Fo- rum 10:239-57 ( 1971 ). 24. Kleingartner, "Collective Bargaining," p.l69. 25. Michael H. Moskow, Teachers and Unions (Philadelphia: Univ. of Pennsylvania, Wharton School of Finance and Commerce, Industrial Research Unit, 1966), p.193. 26. Labor Management Relations Act, 1947, 8( d), 29 U.S.C. and 158( d), 1964. 27. ''Collective Bargaining and the Professional Employee,". Columbia Law Review 69:279 (Feb. 1969). 28. Myron Lieberman and Michael H. Mos- kow, Collective Negotiations for Teachers (Chicago: Rand McNally, 1966), p.221-47. 29. National Education Association, Guidelines for Professional Negotiation (Washington, D.C.: National Education Association, 1965), p.21-22. 30. Donald F. Phillips, ''New Demands of Nurses," Hospitals 48:32 (Aug. 16, 1974). 31. Lefkowitz, "Unionization in the Human Service Industries," p.616-22. 32. Ibid., p.614-15. 33. County of Los Angeles, Los Angeles Coun- ty Department of Public Social Services, et al., v. Los Angeles County Employees Association, SEIU Local 660, et al. 33 Cal. App. 3d 1 ( 1973 ). 34. W. Richard Scott, "Professionals in Bu- reaucracies: Areas of Conflict," in Howard M. Vollmer and D. W. Mills, eds., Profes- sionalization (Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Pren- tice-Hall, 1966).