1st Edition

Renewing International Labour Studies

Edited By Marcus Taylor Copyright 2011
    216 Pages
    by Routledge

    216 Pages
    by Routledge

    This volume seeks to re-energise the paradigm of the New International Labour Studies by detailing how struggles over the construction, reproduction, utilisation and restructuring of labour forces are the contested social foundations upon which the global economy stands.

    Through a combination of theoretical works and a series of case studies, the volume highlights the cutting edge of international labour studies. Its expands on three pivotal areas of study within the discipline:1) the social construction of new labour forces across an expanding international division of labour; 2) the self-organising potential of workers, particularly within non-traditional sectors; and 3) the possibilities for transborder labour movements to help address the asymmetrical power relationships between globalised capital and localised labour.

    In addressing these themes, the volume helps explain not only how the contemporary international division of labour is produced and reproduced, but also the strengths and limits to current attempts to overcome its unequal and divisive nature.

    This book was published as a special issue of Third World Quarterly.

    1. Who Works for Globalisation? The Challenges and Possibilities for International Labour Studies Marcus Taylor  Part 1: The Social Construction of Labour for the Global Economy  2. Modes of Production, Rules for Reproduction and Gender: The Fabrication of China’s Textile Manufacturing Workforce since the late Empire Etienne Cantin  3. Gendering Liberalisation and Labour Reform in Malaysia: Fostering ‘Competitiveness’ in the Productive and Reproductive Economies Juanita Elias  4. China’s New Labour Contract Law: Is China Moving Towards Increased Power for Workers? Haiyan Wang, Richard P. Appelbaum, Francesca DeGiuli and Nelson Lichtenstein  5. From Fields of Power to Fields of Sweat: The Dual Process of Constructing Temporary Migrant Labour in Mexico and Canada Leigh Binford  Part 2: New Working Classes, Collective Organising and Modes of Resistance  6. Disciplining Capital: Export Grape Production, the State and Class Dynamics in Northeast Brazil Ben Selwyn  7. Legal Liminality: The Gender and Labour Politics of Organising South Korea’s Irregular Workforce Jennifer Jihye Chun  8. The Radicalisation of the New Chinese Working Class: A Case Study of Collective Action in the Gemstone Industry Leung Pak Nang and Pun Ngai  Part 3: Transborder Struggles, Corporate Social Responsibility and the ‘New Labour Internationalism’  9. Local Worker Struggles in the Global South: Reconsidering Northern Impacts on International Labour Standards Don Wells  10. Labouring under an Illusion? Lesotho’s ‘Sweat-Free’ Label Gay W. Seidman  11. Jumping Scale and Bridging Space in the Era of Corporate Social Responsibility: Cross-Border Labour Struggles in the Global Garment Industry  Jeroen Merk  12. Afterword: Beyond the ‘New’ International Labour Studies Ronaldo Munck  Rewview Article  13. Power, Production and Solidarity: Trends in Contemporary International Labour Studies Andrew Stevens

    Biography

    Marcus Taylor is an Assistant Professor in the department of Global Development Studies at Queen’s University, Canada. He is the author of From Pinochet to the ‘Third Way’: Neoliberalism and Social Transformation in Chile (Pluto, 2006) and contributing editor of Global Economy Contested: Power and Conflict Across the International Division of Labour (2008).