Most scholarship within social reproduction theory focuses on women’s paid and unpaid care and domestic work, typically within the global North. Rarely has social reproduction theory grappled with unfree labour in commodity supply chains, particularly in the global South. However, these labour relations also involve gendered power relations that cut across the productive and reproductive realms of the economy, which can be illuminated by social reproduction theory analysis. In this article, we reflect on how social reproduction theory can be used to make sense of unfree labour’s role in global supply chains, expanding its geographical scope and the forms of labour exploitation encompassed within it. Conceptually, we harness the insights of ...
The growing recognition of unpaid work in international law and the Sustainable Development Goals ac...
Over the past few decades, feminist legal scholars have successfully gendered several areas of legal...
This article proposes a reading of the COVID‐19 crisis through a social reproduction lens, with a fo...
The COVID-19 pandemic has confirmed the relevance of social reproduction as a key analytical lens to...
Orthodox Marxist analyses have generally excluded social reproduction activities and realms from the...
Since the global financial crisis of 2008, there has been a resurgence of Marxist feminism, with man...
This article explores ‘time’ as a crucial category of analysis shaping and shaped by the dynamics of...
Women’s unpaid care and domestic work is gaining relevance in policy-making as well as in academia. ...
From a feminist political economy perspective, the unfolding of the coronavirus is a further reminde...
Contrary to the expectations of liberal and neoclassical economists, as well as many Marxists, the d...
The persistence and reproduction of unfree labor challenges our understanding of labor relations un...
Problems of labor (power) reproduction in global garment supply chains are broadly reviewed in relat...
Disputes over the meaning of human trafficking, forced labour and modern slavery have both provoked ...
This article argues that Social Reproduction Theory (SRT) is the trend best positioned for further d...
COVID-19 has shaken a foundational pillar of global capitalism: the organisation of work. Whilst wor...
The growing recognition of unpaid work in international law and the Sustainable Development Goals ac...
Over the past few decades, feminist legal scholars have successfully gendered several areas of legal...
This article proposes a reading of the COVID‐19 crisis through a social reproduction lens, with a fo...
The COVID-19 pandemic has confirmed the relevance of social reproduction as a key analytical lens to...
Orthodox Marxist analyses have generally excluded social reproduction activities and realms from the...
Since the global financial crisis of 2008, there has been a resurgence of Marxist feminism, with man...
This article explores ‘time’ as a crucial category of analysis shaping and shaped by the dynamics of...
Women’s unpaid care and domestic work is gaining relevance in policy-making as well as in academia. ...
From a feminist political economy perspective, the unfolding of the coronavirus is a further reminde...
Contrary to the expectations of liberal and neoclassical economists, as well as many Marxists, the d...
The persistence and reproduction of unfree labor challenges our understanding of labor relations un...
Problems of labor (power) reproduction in global garment supply chains are broadly reviewed in relat...
Disputes over the meaning of human trafficking, forced labour and modern slavery have both provoked ...
This article argues that Social Reproduction Theory (SRT) is the trend best positioned for further d...
COVID-19 has shaken a foundational pillar of global capitalism: the organisation of work. Whilst wor...
The growing recognition of unpaid work in international law and the Sustainable Development Goals ac...
Over the past few decades, feminist legal scholars have successfully gendered several areas of legal...
This article proposes a reading of the COVID‐19 crisis through a social reproduction lens, with a fo...