This essay contrasts the scattered resistance of Chinese urban workers to the restructuring of state-owned enterprises at the turn of the century with the long march of migrant workers from victims to subjects. I argue that the “functional authoritarian” nature of the Chinese state and its policy of embracing globalization created the conditions for the defeat of China’s traditional urban working class. Coinciding with this moment has been the gradual emergence of a new movement of labor headed by migrant workers who have taken advantage of structural flaws in China’s development trajectory to pursue collective interests. This movement in the making has demonstrated a capacity to overcome spatial divisions and may even challenge neoliberal ...
Globalization of capital accumulation and transnational production highlight a shifting paradigm in ...
In the past two decades, stories of unpaid wages, excessive work hours, labour-related injuries and ...
To analyze the relationship between globalization and labour protest, this paper compares labour pol...
China's capitalist transformation offers us a non-Western perspective to understand the contradictio...
Special issue on globalization(s) and labour in China and India, guest edited by Paul Bowles and Joh...
China now has the world’s largest labor force and is the leading recipient of foreign direct investm...
This paper puts forward three arguments regarding the nature and consequences of China’s rising lab...
2009-2010 > Academic research: refereed > Publication in refereed journalVersion of RecordPublishe
The financial crisis of 2008 brought many changes to the world economy with China seeming to stand o...
This article begins by engaging with some recent attempts to bring the study of the agency of labour...
Studies of labor in China have taken an exciting turn in recent years with the publication of numero...
Most socialists have always embraced the concept of proletarian internationalism. Indeed, organizati...
As a result of its open-door policies and 30 years of reform, China has become the "world'...
China’s manufacturing model has been built on the exploitation of migrant workers under a despotic l...
Working class studies on China commonly use the lens of proletarianization to understand class forma...
Globalization of capital accumulation and transnational production highlight a shifting paradigm in ...
In the past two decades, stories of unpaid wages, excessive work hours, labour-related injuries and ...
To analyze the relationship between globalization and labour protest, this paper compares labour pol...
China's capitalist transformation offers us a non-Western perspective to understand the contradictio...
Special issue on globalization(s) and labour in China and India, guest edited by Paul Bowles and Joh...
China now has the world’s largest labor force and is the leading recipient of foreign direct investm...
This paper puts forward three arguments regarding the nature and consequences of China’s rising lab...
2009-2010 > Academic research: refereed > Publication in refereed journalVersion of RecordPublishe
The financial crisis of 2008 brought many changes to the world economy with China seeming to stand o...
This article begins by engaging with some recent attempts to bring the study of the agency of labour...
Studies of labor in China have taken an exciting turn in recent years with the publication of numero...
Most socialists have always embraced the concept of proletarian internationalism. Indeed, organizati...
As a result of its open-door policies and 30 years of reform, China has become the "world'...
China’s manufacturing model has been built on the exploitation of migrant workers under a despotic l...
Working class studies on China commonly use the lens of proletarianization to understand class forma...
Globalization of capital accumulation and transnational production highlight a shifting paradigm in ...
In the past two decades, stories of unpaid wages, excessive work hours, labour-related injuries and ...
To analyze the relationship between globalization and labour protest, this paper compares labour pol...