Labour in Global Value Chains in Asia

Author:   Dev Nathan ,  Meenu Tewari (University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill) ,  Sandip Sarkar
Publisher:   Cambridge University Press
ISBN:  

9781107103740


Pages:   560
Publication Date:   13 October 2016
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
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Labour in Global Value Chains in Asia


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Author:   Dev Nathan ,  Meenu Tewari (University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill) ,  Sandip Sarkar
Publisher:   Cambridge University Press
Imprint:   Cambridge University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 16.30cm , Height: 4.00cm , Length: 24.00cm
Weight:   0.850kg
ISBN:  

9781107103740


ISBN 10:   1107103746
Pages:   560
Publication Date:   13 October 2016
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

Table of Contents

1. Introduction Dev Nathan, Meenu Tewari and Sandip Sarkar; 2. Achieving better work for apparel workers in Asia Arianna Rossi; 3. Improving wages and working conditions in the Bangladesh garment sector: the role of horizontal and vertical relations Nazneen Ahmed and Dev Nathan; 4. Bargaining in garment GVCs: the Asia floor wage Anannya Bhattacharjee and Ashim Roy; 5. Fresh produce markets, standards, and dynamics of labour: grapes in India Sukhpal Singh; 6. The 'zero-fee' tour: price competition and chain downgrading in Chinese tourism Yang Fuquan, Yu Yin and Dev Nathan; 7. Restricting competition to reduce poverty: impact of the tourism value chain in an upland economy in China Yang Fuquan, Yu Xiaongang, Yu Yin, Govind Kelkar and Dev Nathan; 8. Restructuring of post-crisis GVCs: tourism in Bali, Indonesia Girish Nanda and Keith Hargreaves; 9. Dynamics of labour-intensive clusters in China: wage costs and moving inland Lixia Mei and Jici Wang; 10. Migrant labour in global value chains in Asia Yuko Hamada; 11. From disposable to empowered: rearticulating labour in Sri Lankan apparel factories Annelies M. Goger; 12. Scripted performances? Local readings of 'global' health and safety standards in the apparel sector in Sri Lanka Kanchana N. Ruwanpura; 13. Diffusing labour standards down and beyond the value chain: lessons from the Mewat experiment Meenu Tewari; 14. Social upgrading in mobile phone GVCs: firm-level comparisons of working conditions and labour rights Joonkoo Lee, Gary Gereffi and Sang-Hoon Lee; 15. The politics of global production: Apple, Foxconn and China's new working class Jenny Chan, Ngai Pun and Mark Selden; 16. New strategies of industrial organisation and labour in the mobile telecom sector in India Sumangala Damodaran; 17. Global production networks and labour process Praveen Jha and Amit Chakraborty; 18. Still a distance to go: social upgrading in the Indian ITO-BPO-KPO sector Ernesto Noronha and Premilla D'Cruz; 19. What do workers gain from being in a GVC? ICT in India Sandip Sarkar and Balwant S. Mehta; 20. Governance types and employment systems Dev Nathan; 21. The double movement of labour in the reformation of GVCs Dev Nathan, Meenu Tewari and Sandip Sarkar.

Reviews

'... a conceptually coherent and empirically rich assessment of the complex and shifting position of labour in GVCs in Asia ... very effectively uses different GVC governance types as an organising frame, but also gives full weight to the place-specific or 'horizontal' factors that powerfully shape the outcomes and opportunities for labour in GVCs ... an exciting contribution which deserves a wide readership across the field of GVC/global production network research and beyond.' Neil Coe, National University of Singapore 'This important book demonstrates ... that GVCs are not delivering a fair share of the economic benefits to workers and that private compliance approaches have failed. It contributes to a better understanding of the underlying causes, which should help governments, companies and others interested in positively influencing working conditions in GVCs to distinguish worker-centered strategies that can lead to genuine change from mere window-dressing.' Jenny Holdcroft, IndustriALL Global Union '... a major contribution to knowledge of how GVCs work, the wage and skill patterns that they create, the conditions under which gains for labour can be maximized and the ways in which the actors concerned are responding. It is required reading for anyone who wants to get behind the rhetoric of the global economy to understand the realities on the ground.' Gerry Rodgers, International Institute of Labour Studies, Geneva 'The link between an increasingly important type of participation in international trade and conditions in the labor market, and thus the process of development in general throws much-needed light on a topical subject of great concern in Asia and elsewhere.' Pranab Bardhan, University of California, Berkeley


Advance praise: '... a conceptually coherent and empirically rich assessment of the complex and shifting position of labour in GVCs in Asia ... very effectively uses different GVC governance types as an organising frame, but also gives full weight to the place-specific or 'horizontal' factors that powerfully shape the outcomes and opportunities for labour in GVCs ... an exciting contribution which deserves a wide readership across the field of GVC/global production network research and beyond.' Neil Coe, National University of Singapore Advance praise: 'This important book demonstrates ... that GVCs are not delivering a fair share of the economic benefits to workers and that private compliance approaches have failed. It contributes to a better understanding of the underlying causes, which should help governments, companies and others interested in positively influencing working conditions in GVCs to distinguish worker-centered strategies that can lead to genuine change from mere window-dressing.' Jenny Holdcroft, IndustriALL Global Union Advance praise: '... a major contribution to knowledge of how GVCs work, the wage and skill patterns that they create, the conditions under which gains for labour can be maximized and the ways in which the actors concerned are responding. It is required reading for anyone who wants to get behind the rhetoric of the global economy to understand the realities on the ground.' Gerry Rodgers, International Institute of Labour Studies, Geneva Advance praise: 'The link between an increasingly important type of participation in international trade and conditions in the labor market, and thus the process of development in general throws much-needed light on a topical subject of great concern in Asia and elsewhere.' Pranab Bardhan, University of California, Berkeley


...an impressive number of case studies from several Asian countries to show how their specialized location in GVCs as 'supplier countries', different distribution of surplus along those chains and varying governance types structure...wages, employment relations and working conditions...This link between an increasingly important type of participation in international trade and conditions in the labor market and thus the process of development in general throws much-needed light on a topical subject of great concern in Asia and elsewhere. Pranab Bardhan, University of California at Berkeley ...a conceptually rich and empirically coherent assessment of the complex and shifting position of labour in GVCs in Asia...very effectively uses different GVC governance types as an organising frame, but also gives full weight to the place-specific or 'horizontal' factors that powerfully shape the outcomes and opportunities for labour in GVCs...an exciting contribution which deserves a wide readership across the field of GCC/global production network research and beyond. Neil Coe, National University of Singapore This important book demonstrates...that GVCs are not delivering a fair share of the economic benefits to workers and that private compliance approaches have failed. It contributes to a better understanding of the underlying causes, which should help governments, companies and others interested in positively influencing working conditions in GVCs to distinguish worker-centered strategies that can lead to genuine change from mere window-dressing. Jenny Holdcroft, IndustriALL Global Union ...a major contribution to knowledge of how GVCs work, the wage and skill patterns that they create, the conditions under which gains for labour can be maximized and the ways in which the actors concerned are responding. It is required reading for anyone who wants to get behind the rhetoric of the global economy to understand the realities on the ground. Gerry Rodgers, International Institute of Labour Studies, Geneva


Author Information

Dev Nathan is Visiting Professor at the Institute for Human Development, New Delhi, and Visiting Research Fellow at the Center on Globalisation, Governance and Competitiveness at Duke University, North Carolina. As an economist, his main research interests are global value chains, labour conditions, rural and indigenous peoples' development, and gender issues. Some of his recent publications, co-authored or co-edited, are Aadhaar: Gender, Identity and Development (2015) and Markets and Indigenous Peoples in Asia: Lessons from Development Projects (2012). A frequent contributor to Economic and Political Weekly, he has also published in journals such as Science, Current Sociology and Oxford Development Papers. Meenu Tewari is Associate Professor of Economic and International Development at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. Her research focuses on the political economy of development, industrialization, and on institutional reform in the public and urban sectors. She is particularly interested in the changing nature of work in rapidly urbanizing low-income economies, and in the challenge of skill formation and upgrading within regional and global production networks. Her work has been published in several journals including World Development, Competition and Change, Environment and Planning, Oxford Development Studies and the Global Economy Journal. Sandip Sarkar is Professor at the Institute for Human Development, New Delhi. Previously, he has worked in several research institutes including the Institute of Economic Growth and the Institute for Studies in Industrial Development. His main areas of research interest include industry, poverty, labour, and employment, on which he has experienced over two decades. Of late, he has also been working in the areas of information and Communication Technology (ICT) and Global Value Chain (GVC). He has authored a number of titles and he has also contributed a large number of research articles in both national and international reputed journals.

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