Hi all,
I am here sharing the link to my PhD thesis: http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/3205/
I did not spend 4 years doing this so that it rests in a shelf at a library. Much the contrary, I did it because I wanted to disseminate what happens in "national sweatshops" (small inner-city workshops) in Argentina and Italy, why they are multiplying, the context in which they arose, the role of the states (and their motivations for letting this happen), the strategies of workers' unions and informal workers and their limitations, the importance of addressing new slavery and human trafficking issues, etc etc.
I hope this is helpful for those of you working (academically and/or politically) in these issues, or for those who are just interested.
Best wishes,
Jerónimo
Neoliberal Fashion: The Political Economy of Sweatshops in Europe and Latin America
ABSTRACT
Changes in the spatial organisation of capitalist production internationally over the last four decades have had profound impacts in the clothing industry. The strategies adopted by entrepreneurs to face economic instability and stagnation have systematically affected workers, mostly by a deep labour flexibilisation. In several cities, a return to the widespread use of the sweatshop system can be witnessed; in some others, such systems have indeed emerged. Today, sweatshops are a structural feature of the industry.
This research aims at analysing the changes that the fashion industry has undergone during the last four decades and its consequences over working conditions. In addition, I address the question of what does the return of the sweatshop tell us about neoliberalism. Two main types of sweatshops are identified: ‘international sweatshops’ (mostly large factories located in Export Economic Zones, also called ‘maquilas’) and ‘local sweatshops’ (small
inner-city workshops located in proximity to the markets). Only the second type isemphasised in here, and two case studies were conducted: the City Buenos Aires and the
Province of Prato (Tuscany). The results reveal that in both cities informal economy, human trafficking, and child and forced labour are counterparts of the glamorous fashion
businesses.
The role of the state in regulating political economic shifts that have led to the sweatshop crisis, is addressed as well. Against the belief of its ‘demise’ I argue that the state has had a major role in engineering the mechanisms allowing a fierce redistribution of wealth away
from labour, which encompasses state terrorism as well.
In sum, the shift in the balance of power between capital and labour, and the changes operated in the role of the state during the latest four decades, are found to be major causes for ‘the return of the sweatshop’. In the clothing industry, these changes have led to a situation which portrays with clarity the inequalities to which Neoliberalism has led – albeit to varied extents and through different mechanisms according to the spatio-temporal contexts – all around the world.
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Dr Jerónimo Montero
Department of Geography
University of Durham
Latin American Editor for Human Geography
www.hugeog.com
Research fellow - Lateinamerika-Institüt
Freie Universität Berlin &
Ibero-Amerikanisches Institüt
www.desigualdades.net
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