Review and positions: global production networks and labour
Date
2011
Authors
Rainnie, A.
Herod, A.
McGrath Champ, S.
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Journal article
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Competition and Change, 2011; 15(2):155-169
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Abstract
Commodity chains that are global in extent have increasingly come to be seen as the defining element of the contemporary globalized world economy. Since the 1990s a body of theory — evolving from global commodity chain analysis to global value chain analysis to global production network analysis — has focused upon understanding how such commodity chains function. However, despite providing many important insights, these bodies of literature have generally suffered from a major deficiency in that they have failed to consider labour as an active agent capable of shaping such chains' structure and geographical organization. Here, then, we present a case for locating more centrally labour, in production network analysis.
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Copyright 2011 University of Hertfordshire Business School and W. S. Maney & Son