孟加拉国成衣行业反弹:重新审视性别劳动力的不稳定性和依赖性

IF 1 Q3 POLITICAL SCIENCE Asian Journal of Comparative Politics Pub Date : 2023-05-08 DOI:10.1177/20578911231170208
A. Khaled, A. Ansar
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引用次数: 1

摘要

新冠肺炎疫情爆发几周后,数千名成衣工人被任意解雇,他们经常被视为孟加拉国经济增长和扶贫的生命线。现有订单的广泛取消,随后工厂关闭和工人裁员,引发了RMG工人前所未有的危机,其中绝大多数是女性。随着该行业从最初的动荡中缓慢复苏并正在反弹,本文重新审视了疫情对孟加拉国RMG工人的影响,他们主要来自该国贫困的农村地区。本文利用第一手数据和第二手文献,对新冠疫情对RMG女性员工的不成比例的影响进行了令人信服的描述。在我们研究对工人的影响时,我们还回顾了该行业的结构性等级制度和权力不对称——这是当代全球经济的一个典型特征。这篇文章为新冠肺炎大流行及其对全球南方不断变化的劳动力谱的影响的新兴文献提供了三个不同的贡献。首先,它探讨了新冠疫情更广泛的性别影响,揭示了它对女性的影响是如何不均衡的。其次,它强调了全球供应链中预先存在的权力动态如何进一步加剧了孟加拉国RMG行业的不平等、边缘化和工人的不稳定。最后,它强调了全球生产和劳动力格局中“核心”国家和“外围”国家之间不平等的相互依存关系,突出了它们关系的不对称性。
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Bangladesh's ready-made garments sector rebound: Revisiting gendered labor precarity and dependency
Thousands of ready-made garment (RMG) workers, frequently seen as Bangladesh's lifeline for economic growth and poverty alleviation, were sacked arbitrarily just weeks after the Covid-19 pandemic outbreak. The widespread cancellation of existing orders, followed by factory closures and worker layoffs, triggered an unprecedented crisis for RMG workers, the vast majority of whom are women. As the industry is slowly recovering from the initial upheaval and on its way to rebound, this article revisits the impacts of the pandemic on the RMG workers in Bangladesh, who predominantly hails from impoverished rural regions of the country. Using first-hand data and secondary literature, this article offers a compelling account of the pandemic outbreak's disproportionate impact on female RMG workers. As we examine the effects on workers, we also look back at the structural hierarchies and power asymmetries embedded in this sector—a quintessential feature of the contemporary global economy. The article offers three distinct contributions to the emerging literature on the Covid-19 pandemic and its impacts on the changing labor spectrum in the global South. First, it explores the pandemic's broader gendered implications, revealing how it unevenly affected women. Second, it underlines how the pre-existing power dynamic within the global supply chain further exacerbated inequality, marginalization, and workers' precarity in Bangladesh's RMG industry. Lastly, it underscores the unequal interdependence between "core" and "peripheral" countries in the global production and labor landscape, highlighting the asymmetrical nature of their relationship.
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CiteScore
1.60
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0.00%
发文量
40
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