In this path-breaking study, social economist Naila Kabeer examines the lives of Bangladeshi garment workers to shed light on the question of what constitutes ‘fair’ competition in international trade. While Bangladesh is generally considered a poor, conservative Muslim country, with a long tradition of female seclusion, women here have entered factories to take their place as a prominent, first generation, industrial labour force. In Britain, on the other hand, a supposedly modern and secular society with a long tradition of female employment, Bangladeshi women are largely concentrated in home-based piecework for the garment industry. This book draws on testimonies from both groups concerning their experiences at work and the impact these have on their lives generally to explain such paradoxes. Kabeer argues that any attempt to devise acceptable labour standards at the international level which takes no account of the forces of inclusion and exclusion within local labour markets is likely to represent the interests of powerful losers in the international trade at the expense of weak winners.
Bangladeshi Women Workers and Labour Market Decisions: The Power to Choose
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Title
Bangladeshi Women Workers and Labour Market Decisions: The Power to Choose
Author
Edition
1st ed.
Publisher
ISBN
8178290758
Length
xvi+464p., Appendix; Bibliography; Index; 22cm.
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