Producción CyT

Local Sweatshops in the Global Economy: Accumulation Dynamics and the Manufacturing of a Reserve Army

Capitulo de Libro

Autoría:

MONTERO, JERÓNIMO

Fecha:

2018

Editorial y Lugar de Edición:

Springer

Libro:

Global Perspectives on Workers' and Labour Organizations (pp. 63-84)
Springer

ISBN:

978-981-10-7882-8

Resumen

Sweatshops lie at the core of the fashion industry worldwide. While awareness about large sweatshops in export-processing zones is broad, little is known about small local sweatshops in large cities both in core and peripheral economies, employing migrant labour and supplying cheap garment to fast-fashionbranded retailers. Having been left at the margins of this industry during Fordism, these ?local sweatshops? are back since the late 1970s. In these, working conditions range from precarious employment to forced labour. This chapter asks what does the return of local sweatshops mean for debates on unfree labour and capitalist accumulation. Through an analysis of the changes in the production and commercialisation of fashion clothing since the late 1970s, I show that the flourishing of forced labour during recent decades along the success of well-known brands and retailers, suggests that, far from being a pre-capitalist reminiscence, forced labour is not only compatible with capitalist accumulation, but it can also be critical for its survival. Following from this, responses from unions and community organisations are analysed, based on the case of anti-sweatshop activism in Buenos Aires. I conclude by showing that when the agenda against forced labour is taken by NGOs rather than by labour activists, class perspectives are largely absent and improvements are poor.

Palabras Clave

SWEATSHOPSFORCED LABOURFAST FASHIONMIGRANT WORKERS

Descargue o solicite el texto completo:

http://hdl.handle.net/11336/245022