The increasing precariousness of labour forces globally has prompted some to argue that a new ‘precariat’ is emerging to challenge the privileges of the securely employed ‘salariat’. This divergence within the working class has been depicted as more significant than the traditional conflict between labour and capital. This essay examines these discussions in China, where precarity is increasingly being employed as a theoretical tool to explain the fragmentation of labour in the country
Over the past 30 years, labour relations, and, indeed, the entirety of working class politics in Chi...
Over half a century after the 1949 revolution, China is again being radically transformed, this time...
This paper argues that whilst the relationship between US consumerism and China's low-wage productio...
The increasing precariousness of labour forces globally has prompted some to argue that a new ‘preca...
If Marxists are right, why did Mao’s China witness a prevalence of precarious labour? If mainstream ...
Lin JN. Precarity, Cognitive (Non-)Resistance and the Conservative Working Class in China. Journal o...
The study of Chinese labour politics has returned to the centre of scholarly interest as China has i...
With a shift in manufacturing from the developed countries of North America, Europe, and East Asia t...
Focusing on the conceptual evolution of precarious labour over the past three decades, this essay pr...
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis Group in Globalizations, ...
Many labour experts have discussed the ‘dormitory labour regime’ in China’s manufacturing industry, ...
Based on a mixed-methods research design, this article explores young adults’ work trajectories. The...
In this issue, we present three distinct perspectives on how the party-state manages and controls Ch...
International audienceThe rise of wages in China would seem to indicate that the demographic dividen...
Based on a mixed-methods research design, this article explores young adults' work trajectories. The...
Over the past 30 years, labour relations, and, indeed, the entirety of working class politics in Chi...
Over half a century after the 1949 revolution, China is again being radically transformed, this time...
This paper argues that whilst the relationship between US consumerism and China's low-wage productio...
The increasing precariousness of labour forces globally has prompted some to argue that a new ‘preca...
If Marxists are right, why did Mao’s China witness a prevalence of precarious labour? If mainstream ...
Lin JN. Precarity, Cognitive (Non-)Resistance and the Conservative Working Class in China. Journal o...
The study of Chinese labour politics has returned to the centre of scholarly interest as China has i...
With a shift in manufacturing from the developed countries of North America, Europe, and East Asia t...
Focusing on the conceptual evolution of precarious labour over the past three decades, this essay pr...
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis Group in Globalizations, ...
Many labour experts have discussed the ‘dormitory labour regime’ in China’s manufacturing industry, ...
Based on a mixed-methods research design, this article explores young adults’ work trajectories. The...
In this issue, we present three distinct perspectives on how the party-state manages and controls Ch...
International audienceThe rise of wages in China would seem to indicate that the demographic dividen...
Based on a mixed-methods research design, this article explores young adults' work trajectories. The...
Over the past 30 years, labour relations, and, indeed, the entirety of working class politics in Chi...
Over half a century after the 1949 revolution, China is again being radically transformed, this time...
This paper argues that whilst the relationship between US consumerism and China's low-wage productio...