Abstract

ABSTRACT Live animal export has developed into a trade on an international scale and one that has attracted criticisms and protests to protect animal welfare and rights by groups and organisations over several decades. This paper analyses a little-known role played by a blue-collar trade union and its campaign to ban live animal exports from Australia. Using social movement theory, the paper argues that the Australasian Meat Industry Employees’ Union (AMIEU) chose strategically to invite representatives of an animal welfare and rights organisation to speak at a 1980 blockade in order to buttress a traditional industrial campaign to achieve its objective. Yet after developing links with such groups and organisations, the union found itself increasingly alienated from these strategic alliances as time passed. This case study, although grounded in social movement literature, remains a labour history study of changing union strategy and adaptability to circumstances.

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