Home-based work and home-based workers (1800-2021) - Netherlands Brill 2022 - xix, 421p.

1. Introduction continuity and change
2. Reading the margins of business censuses
3. "A virtuous woman knows how to sew"
4. Sewing at home in Greece, 1870s to 1930s
5. Women's home based work in Istanbul garment industry
Part 2
6. Introduction between ban and human rights
7. From industrial evil to decent work
8. Realising rights for homeworkers in global value chains
9. Home work in Thailand
Part 3
10. Introduction between citizens and worker's rights
11. Genealogies and assemblages of resistance
12. Industrial home work and fordism in Western Europe
13. Refusing invisibility
14. Home based-Workers
Part 4
15. Introduction perspectives on
16. Contemporary digital work
17. Dynamics of contemporary capitalist accumulation and the prospects for home work in the Indian garment industry
18. Are we not being entrepreneurial? exploring the home/work Negotiation of South Asian immigrant women entrepreneurs in Canada
19. Home-based manufacturing work for women in India
Part 5
20. Artwork
21. Postscript: launching an international network of home-based workers during the covid-19 crisis

This book would not have been possible without the support and much more of not only the contributors, but many other individuals, institutions, and organisations who worked together for the 2018 conference at stockholm that gave rise to the idea of the book, and then helped develop that idea up to the stage stage of final publication in 2021.


English

978-9004499447

18746705


Self-employed
Home-based businesses
Human rights

658.0412 / HOM
Urban Resource Centre (YUVA). All Rights Reserved. © 2021
Implemented and Customised by Mr. Wasim Rahaman for KMLC

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