Contents:
1. Foundations
Andrew Herod, Susan McGrath-Champ and Al Rainnie
PART I: WORK, SPACE AND THE STATE
2. Globalisation and the State
Bob Jessop
3. Creating Markets, Contesting Markets: Labour Internationalism
and the European Common Transport Policy
Peter Turnbull
PART II: WORKING SPACES
4. Working Spaces
Al Rainnie, Susan McGrath-Champ and Andrew Herod
Section 2.1 Regionalisation, Globalisation and Labour
5. Labour Markets from the Bottom Up
Jamie Peck and Nik Theodore
6. Clothing Workers after Worker States: The Consequences for Work
and Labour of Outsourcing, Nearshoring and Delocalisation in
Postsocialist Europe
John Pickles and Adrian Smith
7. Tele-mediated Servants and Self-servants of the Global Economy:
Labour in the Era of ICT-enabled E-commerce
Matthew Zook and Michael Samers
8. Gender, Space and Labour Market Participation: The Experiences
of British Pakistani Women
Robina Mohammad
9. Filipino Migration and the Spatialities of Labour Market
Subordination
Philip F. Kelly
Section 2.2 Building Space
10. Competing Geographies of Welfare Capitalism and its Workers:
Kohler Village and the Spatial Politics of Planned Company
Towns
Kathryn J. Oberdeck
11. Work, Place and Community in Socialism and Postsocialism
Alison Stenning
12. Plastic Palm Trees and Blue Pumpkins: Synthetic Fun and Real
Control in Contemporary Space
Chris Baldry
13. Dormitory Labour Regimes and the Labour Process in China: New
Workers in Old Factory Forms
Ngai Pun and Chris Smith
PART III: WORKERS IN SPACE
14. Workers in Space
Al Rainnie, Andrew Herod and Susan McGrath-Champ
Section 3.1 Labour Institutions in Space and Place
15. Global Unions versus Global Capital: Or, the Complexity of
Transnational Labour Relations
Ronaldo Munck and Peter Waterman
16. Methodological Nationalism and Territorial Capitalism: Mobile
Labour and the Challenges to the ‘German Model’
Christian Berndt
17. European Works Councils: From the Local to the Global?
Ian Fitzgerald and John Stirling
18. The New Economic Model and Spatial Changes in Labour Relations
in Post-NAFTA Mexico
Enrique de la Garza Toledo
Section 3.2 Organising in Space and Place
19. Contested Space: Union Organising in the Old Economy
Bradon Ellem
20. Contesting the New Politics of Space: Labour and Capital in the
White Goods Industry in Southern Africa
Andries Bezuidenhout and Edward Webster
21. The Multi-scalarity of Trade Union Practice
Jeremy Anderson, Paula Hamilton and Jane Wills
22. Working Space and the New Labour Internationalism
Rob Lambert and Michael Gillan
23. Online Union Campaigns and the Shrinking Globe: The LabourStart
Experience
Eric Lee
24. ‘Across the Great Divide’: Local and Global Trade Union
Responses to Call Centre Offshoring to India
Phil Taylor and Peter Bain
PART IV: AFTERWORD
25. Workers, Economies, Geographies
Noel Castree
Index
Edited by Susan McGrath-Champ, Professor (Honorary) of Work and Employment Relations, Discipline of Work and Organisational Studies, The University of Sydney, Australia, Andrew Herod, Regents’ Professor, Department of Geography, University of Georgia, US and Al Rainnie, University of South Australia
’. . . provides valuable analysis and debate. It is clearly of
value to students, providing comprehensive coverage of the relevant
ground, and to both students and academics familiar with the
territory for whom the essays begin to point the way toward future
debates, clearly highlighting the necessity of geography to fully
understanding work and employment.'
*Oliver Mallett, Industrial Relations Journal*
'This volume provides a comprehensive overview of the analytical
interactions between geography, space, work and employment. Space
is not simply a banal backdrop against which work and employment
processes and relations operate. Rather, the specific geographical
context both colours, and is coloured by, the modes and nature of
work and employment taking place in that context. Moreover, these
issues are magnified by the tensions between processes operating at
the local and global scales. The volume is particularly timely in
the light of the recent credit crisis.'
*Philip McCann, University of Groningen, The Netherlands*
'This Handbook represents a major milestone in the revitalization
of scholarship on work and employment. It demonstrates that human
geography can - indeed, must - be integrated into labor studies and
industrial relations. Our present era may be characterised as
global capitalism, but "working space" is a social (and often
highly contested) construct and people live and work in a
particular place. To drive these points home, the editors weave
together contributions highlighting the experience of workers in a
wide variety of locations. The result is a volume rich in
conceptual and practical insights; it deserves a wide
audience.'
*Charles J. Whalen, Utica College and Cornell University, US*
'This major edited volume from some of the most eminent scholars
writing on employment and society is to be welcomed. . . The reader
is rewarded with an invaluable volume of excellent work from
original empirical research.'
*Jane Holgate, Leeds University, UK in Labor Studies Journal*
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