TY - JOUR
T1 - Using social reproduction theory to understand unfree labour
AU - Gore, Ellie
AU - LeBaron, Genevieve
N1 - Funding Information:
Gore Ellie LeBaron Genevieve The University of Sheffield, UK Ellie Gore, University of Sheffield, Western Bank, Sheffield S10 2TN, UK. Email: [email protected] 10 2019 0309816819880787 © The Author(s) 2019 2019 Conference of Socialist Economists Most scholarship within social reproduction theory focuses on women’s paid and unpaid care and domestic work, typically within the global North. Rarely has social reproduction theory grappled with unfree labour in commodity supply chains, particularly in the global South. However, these labour relations also involve gendered power relations that cut across the productive and reproductive realms of the economy, which can be illuminated by social reproduction theory analysis. In this article, we reflect on how social reproduction theory can be used to make sense of unfree labour’s role in global supply chains, expanding its geographical scope and the forms of labour exploitation encompassed within it. Conceptually, we harness the insights of social reproduction theory, and Jeffrey Harrod and Robert W Cox’s work on ‘unprotected work’ in the global economy to examine how gendered power relations shape patterns of unfree labour. Empirically, we analyse interview and survey data collected among cocoa workers in Ghana through LeBaron’s Global Business of Forced Labour project. We argue that social reproduction theory can move global supply chain scholarship beyond its presently economistic emphasis on the productive sphere and can shed light into the overlaps between social oppression, economic exploitation, and social reproduction. feminist political economy gender global supply chains social reproduction theory unfree labour edited-state corrected-proof The authors are grateful to the UK Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) for research funding under LeBaron’s grant ES/N001192/1, The Global Business of Forced Labour. They are grateful to Isa Bakker and Stephen Gill for inviting them to be a part of this special issue and the workshops to develop it. They are also thankful to them, and to fellow workshop participants – especially Adrienne Roberts – for their incisive suggestions on earlier drafts of this article. They thank the researchers who assisted with data collection for the Global Business of Forced Labour project: E. Gore, D. Ottie-Boakye, O. Afrane Obed, P. Ekka, H. Babu, A. Kumar, R. Goswami, M. Rahman, H. Sarkar, N. Howard, P. Roberts, V. Ampiah and J. Nyarko.
Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2019.
PY - 2019/12/1
Y1 - 2019/12/1
N2 - Most scholarship within social reproduction theory focuses on women’s paid and unpaid care and domestic work, typically within the global North. Rarely has social reproduction theory grappled with unfree labour in commodity supply chains, particularly in the global South. However, these labour relations also involve gendered power relations that cut across the productive and reproductive realms of the economy, which can be illuminated by social reproduction theory analysis. In this article, we reflect on how social reproduction theory can be used to make sense of unfree labour’s role in global supply chains, expanding its geographical scope and the forms of labour exploitation encompassed within it. Conceptually, we harness the insights of social reproduction theory, and Jeffrey Harrod and Robert W Cox’s work on ‘unprotected work’ in the global economy to examine how gendered power relations shape patterns of unfree labour. Empirically, we analyse interview and survey data collected among cocoa workers in Ghana through LeBaron’s Global Business of Forced Labour project. We argue that social reproduction theory can move global supply chain scholarship beyond its presently economistic emphasis on the productive sphere and can shed light into the overlaps between social oppression, economic exploitation, and social reproduction.
AB - Most scholarship within social reproduction theory focuses on women’s paid and unpaid care and domestic work, typically within the global North. Rarely has social reproduction theory grappled with unfree labour in commodity supply chains, particularly in the global South. However, these labour relations also involve gendered power relations that cut across the productive and reproductive realms of the economy, which can be illuminated by social reproduction theory analysis. In this article, we reflect on how social reproduction theory can be used to make sense of unfree labour’s role in global supply chains, expanding its geographical scope and the forms of labour exploitation encompassed within it. Conceptually, we harness the insights of social reproduction theory, and Jeffrey Harrod and Robert W Cox’s work on ‘unprotected work’ in the global economy to examine how gendered power relations shape patterns of unfree labour. Empirically, we analyse interview and survey data collected among cocoa workers in Ghana through LeBaron’s Global Business of Forced Labour project. We argue that social reproduction theory can move global supply chain scholarship beyond its presently economistic emphasis on the productive sphere and can shed light into the overlaps between social oppression, economic exploitation, and social reproduction.
KW - feminist political economy
KW - gender
KW - global supply chains
KW - social reproduction theory
KW - unfree labour
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85074715514&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1177/0309816819880787
DO - 10.1177/0309816819880787
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85074715514
SN - 0309-8168
VL - 43
SP - 561
EP - 580
JO - Capital And Class
JF - Capital And Class
IS - 4
ER -