Recent developments in the organization of work and production have facilitated the decline of wage employment in many regions of the world. However, the idea of the wage continues to dominate the political imaginations of governments, researchers and activists, based on the historical experiences of industrial workers in the global North.
This edited collection revitalises debates on the future of work by challenging the idea of wage employment as the global norm. Taking theoretical inspiration from the global South, the authors compare lived experiences of ‘ordinary work’ across taken-for-granted conceptual and geographical boundaries; from Cambodian brick kilns to Catalonian cooperatives. Their contributions open up new possibilities for how work, identity and security might be woven together differently.
This volume is an invaluable resource for academics, students and readers interested in alternative and emerging forms of work around the world.
Jadual kandungan
Introduction: Work Beyond the Wage ~ William Monteith, Dora-Olivia Vicol and Philippa Williams
Part One: RUPTURES
Chapter 1., ‘Shit Wages’ and Side Hustles: Ordinary Working Lives in Nairobi, London and Berlin ~ Tatiana Thieme
Chapter 2., The Work of Looking for Work: Surviving Without a Wage in Austerity Britain ~ Sam Strong
Chapter 3., Seeking Attachment in the Fissured Workplace: External Workers in the United States ~ Claudia Strauss
Part Two: RESIGNATIONS
Chapter 4., Wilful Resignations: Women, Labour and Life in Urban India ~ Asiya Islam
Chapter 5., ‘Be Your Own Boss’: Entrepreneurial Dreams on the Urban Margins of South Africa ~ Hannah Dawson
Chapter 6., Work Outside the Hamster’s Cage: Precarity and the Pursuit of a Life Worth Living in Catalonia ~ Vinzenz Bäumer Escobar
Chapter 7., Choosing to be Unfree? The Aspirations and Constraints of Debt-bonded Brick Workers in Cambodia ~ Nithya Natarajan, Katherine Brickell, and Laurie Parsons
Part Three: STRUGGLES
Chapter 8., “Earning Money as the Wheels Turn Around”: Cycle-rickshaw Drivers and Wageless Work in Dhaka ~ Annemiek Prins
Chapter 9., Going Gojek, or Staying Ojek? Competing Visions of Work and Economy in Jakarta’s Motorbike Taxi Industry ~ Mechthild von Vacano
Chapter 10., ‘I Voted Bolsonaro for President’: Street Vending and the Crisis of Labour Representation in Belo Horizonte, Brazil ~ Mara Nogueira
Part Four: POSSIBILITIES
Chapter 11., Extraordinary: Crisis, Charity and Care in London’s World without Work ~ Dora-Olivia Vicol
Chapter 12., Defending the Wage: Visions of Work and Distribution in Namibia ~ E. Fouksman
Mengenai Pengarang
Philippa Williams is Professor of Geography at Queen Mary University of London.