In this issue, we present three distinct perspectives on how the party-state manages and controls Chinese society. First, we consider the role of labour law in China as a vehicle for reinforcing capitalist hegemony. We then look into the limitations of the welfare system in relation to migrant labour. Finally, we challenge some widely-held assumptions about the political nature of land-related social movements in the Chinese countryside. The issue also includes a forum on how precarisation has impacted the Chinese workforce and an article that reflects on the role of poetry as a form of resistance
Since China’s opening up, the Chinese party-state has put great effort into reforming the labour law...
This paper deals with the question of how unemployed workers in China responded to the imposition of...
The Honda workers’ strike in 2010 attracted world wide attention. It was one of thousands of labor d...
In this issue, we present three distinct perspectives on how the party-state manages and controls Ch...
In this issue, we present three distinct perspectives on how the party-state manages and controls Ch...
'Dagong' means 'working for the boss', and bespeaks the commodification of labour. Over the past two...
The article introduces the situation of peasants in China since 1959, focusing on the main forms of ...
While migration from rural areas to cities has always existed in China, rural–urban migrant workers ...
This essay contrasts the scattered resistance of Chinese urban workers to the restructuring of state...
The article outlines Chinese literature following the establishment of the People’s Republic of Chin...
For the last two decades, in a context of combined flexible capitalism and “decentralized legal auth...
http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayAbstract?fromPage=online&aid=3545476&fulltextType=RA&fil...
This paper puts forward three arguments regarding the nature and consequences of China’s rising lab...
This collection includes seven articles from the journal Open Times, a window into contemporary Chin...
Made in China : a quarterly on Chinese labour, civil society, and rights. N° 4, October-December 201...
Since China’s opening up, the Chinese party-state has put great effort into reforming the labour law...
This paper deals with the question of how unemployed workers in China responded to the imposition of...
The Honda workers’ strike in 2010 attracted world wide attention. It was one of thousands of labor d...
In this issue, we present three distinct perspectives on how the party-state manages and controls Ch...
In this issue, we present three distinct perspectives on how the party-state manages and controls Ch...
'Dagong' means 'working for the boss', and bespeaks the commodification of labour. Over the past two...
The article introduces the situation of peasants in China since 1959, focusing on the main forms of ...
While migration from rural areas to cities has always existed in China, rural–urban migrant workers ...
This essay contrasts the scattered resistance of Chinese urban workers to the restructuring of state...
The article outlines Chinese literature following the establishment of the People’s Republic of Chin...
For the last two decades, in a context of combined flexible capitalism and “decentralized legal auth...
http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayAbstract?fromPage=online&aid=3545476&fulltextType=RA&fil...
This paper puts forward three arguments regarding the nature and consequences of China’s rising lab...
This collection includes seven articles from the journal Open Times, a window into contemporary Chin...
Made in China : a quarterly on Chinese labour, civil society, and rights. N° 4, October-December 201...
Since China’s opening up, the Chinese party-state has put great effort into reforming the labour law...
This paper deals with the question of how unemployed workers in China responded to the imposition of...
The Honda workers’ strike in 2010 attracted world wide attention. It was one of thousands of labor d...