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From: *Smita Yadav* <[log in to unmask]>
Date: Tuesday, 1 May 2018
Subject: DEADLINE EXTENDED
To: [log in to unmask]


****FINAL CHANCE TO SUBMIT YOUR INTERESTS****

The  School of Global Studies is pleased to announce a one-day workshop,
June 5th,  on
 Neoliberal Welfare State, Precarity,  and Development: Transnational
Solidarity and Activism for Global Workers on Decent work and Dignified
wages.

ABSTRACT:
In the light of growing precariousness and declining wage conditions both
in the Global North and the Global South, this workshop focuses on how
informal institutions, such as unregulated labour markets, recur in the
discourses of development within the Global South and neoliberalisation of
the welfare state in the Global North. Therefore, the workshop sheds lights
on how informal and formal institutions mutually exchange and connect to
sustain such large scales of global inequalities, and what new forms of
global social movements, solidarities, resistances and protests can result
from this. The workshop concurs with the idea that precarious working lives
within the world of capitalism, with its formal regulatory institutions,
remain under-theorised as people are becoming increasingly dependent on
wage-based economies. As secured and formal forms of work have come under
threat from globalisation, corporatisation, financialisation ;
development/replacement/compensation schemes such as cash-based transfer
and universal basic income have come to take their place in some
countries.  These have occurred so recently, it is difficult to fully grasp
their magnitude and long-term impact as safety nets.

We invite contributions from a diverse range of disciplines such as
critical geography, labour studies/geographies, sociology, International
relations, development studies, migration, and anthropology which discuss
how the distinctions of Global North and Global South might not be
effective in addressing the rise of precarious forms of work at a global
level. The workshop will analyse conceptions of new forms of solidarity
networks across global workers. It will focus on critical and
interdisciplinary discussions of precarity around issues affecting both the
Global North and the Global South. We invite papers focussing on the Global
South workers waging in multiple sectors of the informal economy and also
the industrial north, such as Japan, North America, and Europe.  Some of
the topics (not restricted to) can be: quality and experience of
citizenships, relations with the the welfare state,  zero hour contracts,
gig economy, role of trade unions,  implications of Trans-Pacific
Partnership (TPP) laws in the EU, and just about managing households (JAM)
in the UK and beyond.

Please submit abstract of up to 150-250 words, along with a three-line
author bio and affiliation by 6th May. Refreshments and lunch will also be
provided. We will swiftly sort the papers and send the confirmation to the
participants.

We also invite interests for the role of discussants from across the
faculties, including postdoctoral and early career scholars.

Please send your submissions and informal queries to Smita Yadav at
[log in to unmask]




-- 

Best wishes,
Dyi

Dieuwertje Dyi Huijg
[log in to unmask]
http://manchester.academia.edu/DieuwertjeDyiHuijg

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