114 research outputs found
Daniel Speich Chassé: Die Erfindung des Bruttosozialprodukts. Globale Ungleichheit in der Wissensgeschichte der Ökonomie (= Kritische Studien zur Geschichtswissenschaft, Bd. 212), Göttingen:: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht 2013, 344 S.
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Free Trade Zones, Export Processing Zones, Special Economic Zones and Global Imperial Formations 200 BCE to 2015 CE
Spirits of Capitalism and the De-alienation of Workers: a Historical Perspective on the Mauritian Garment Industry
Capital over labor: Health and safety in export processing zones garment production since 1947
Special economic zones: The global frontlines of neoliberalism’s value regime
This chapter develops an anthropological theory and ethnographic research paradigm to capture the role of special economic zones (SEZs) as frontlines in neoliberalism’s global value regime. Based on global ethnographic and archival research, the lineage of today’s more than 5,000 zones with more than 100 million workers across over 140 nations can be traced back to late 1940s economic development policy innovations in the US-American dependency Puerto Rico. From there, early zone policies spread with remarkable continuity as frontlines of a singular political-economic value regime with novel relations between capital, state, and labor across the diverse geopolitical constellations of capitalist aggression against socialism, decolonization, and non-alignment. Carried by a dynamic global alliance of US-American, various United Nations agencies, private sector pressure groups, and postcolonial comprador bourgeoisies’ development policies, the zones shaped neoliberal export-oriented industrialization by way of implementing gendered and racialized (super-)exploitation of workers in a new international division of labor. The chapter identifies the zones’ prevalent singular value regime as a global labor arbitrage that pits workers in less-developed nations against workers in advanced capitalist nations, while post-colonial (and nowadays all) nation-states provide subsidies for transnational capital in exchange for the provision of employment, contributions to gross domestic product, and incorporation into global value chains. Alongside this, persistent zone operations have established a plural value regime that portrays investors as benevolent donors of employment despite the fact that they operate SEZ factories on the basis of gendered and other super-exploitation that has pushed labor standards into a global race to the bottom
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