Sustainable Value Chains and Labour - Linking Chain and "Inner Drivers"

Global value chains are driven by considerations of cost and efficiency but just as much by power relations. This appears evident from studies of industrial relations and labour outcomes within value chains, especially those where drivenness is most explicit. Within a context of disaggregated but more coordinated production across borders, the standards “industry” continues to grow as a regulatory structure of chain outcomes. Yet the processes by which many workers and communities continue to be made flexible, vulnerable and voiceless, within value chains, are not so clear. The research discus... Mehr ...

Verfasser: Pegler, L.J. (Lee)
Dokumenttyp: workingPaper
Erscheinungsdatum: 2011
Schlagwörter: Brazil-Holland / controlconsent-resistance / flexible labour / governance / governmentality / labour processes / labour rights / labour voice / livelihoods and human security / logistics- ports- advanced services / precarious work / social and economic upgrading / sustainability / value chain
Sprache: Englisch
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-27114811
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
Powered By: BASE
Link(s) : http://repub.eur.nl/pub/25874

Global value chains are driven by considerations of cost and efficiency but just as much by power relations. This appears evident from studies of industrial relations and labour outcomes within value chains, especially those where drivenness is most explicit. Within a context of disaggregated but more coordinated production across borders, the standards “industry” continues to grow as a regulatory structure of chain outcomes. Yet the processes by which many workers and communities continue to be made flexible, vulnerable and voiceless, within value chains, are not so clear. The research discussed in this paper is aimed at exploring the feasibility of labour rights promotion within the context of sustainable global value chains. By this it is meant that the conditions of work and livelihoods (e.g. at the beginning of chains) are “decent/good” and that these are compatible with the reproductability of their environment. A central concern is how to improve the conceptual lenses we use to analyse labour outcomes, and their governance, within value chains. This ISS (Brazil-Holland) project is based on a desire to more effectively link 1) the actors which drive chains, with 2) considerations of work, livelihoods and security for the workers and communities (i.e. their “inner” drivers) supplying those chains. The question of this research derives from a comparison of the “logic” (e.g. efficiency) of these chain drivers vis a vis the “logic” of those at the beginning of chains. The fundamental starting question concerning sustainability is thus whether such competing “logics” can be resolved within global value chains? The concept of governmentality expands the theoretical frame for the consideration of how messages /rules/norms are established, transmitted and contested across these chains. Labour process analysis (expanded with considerations of gender, livelihoods and human security) is suggested for use with those at the beginning of chains. Chains are not static - they are “webs of interaction, where negotiation ...