Making the Woman Worker: Precarious Labor and the Fight for Global Standards, 1919-2019
Autor Eileen Borisen Limba Engleză Hardback – 9 oct 2019
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780190874629
ISBN-10: 0190874627
Pagini: 352
Ilustrații: 18
Dimensiuni: 234 x 163 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.59 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0190874627
Pagini: 352
Ilustrații: 18
Dimensiuni: 234 x 163 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.59 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
Eileen Boris's Making the Woman Worker offers a fundamentally important contribution to the thriving research on twentieth-century global feminisms, to histories of the changing conditions of (women's) work, and to understandings of supranational organisations and the UN system.
This book delivers a clear and detailed account of women in paid and unpaid work based on ILO's century-long history and its transformation, focusing mainly on women who have been more disadvantaged than others in terms of definition, recognition, equal treatment, and empowerment... this outstanding work promises to present a solid narrative of the challenges, failures, victories, and oppositions in the process as well as support, conflict, and tensions among actors involved in the "making of the woman worker" during ILO's 100 years, and the author keeps this promise.
On the centennial of the International Labour Organization (ILO), the transnational body founded after World War I to create global labor standards covering a wide range of workers, Eileen Boris gives us a sweeping 100-year history. She charts the evolution of this crucial body from its almost entirely white, Euro-American, male-dominated origins through the post-World War II era when women from across the Global South began to demand representation and regulation, to the 21st century when women are the majority of activists in a resurgent global labor movement. With verve, keen analysis, and scrupulous attention to detail, Boris takes us inside complex, heated negotiations over the course of the long 20th century that shed light on the ways that, before corporate globalism, labor activists, governments and grass roots workers sought to make a more just world—and, in it, a place for all kinds of woman workers.
Boris has written a lively, interesting, and timely study of women's precarious informal work and intimate labors. Covering a century's worth of documents from the ILO archive, she situates her account within the broader historical forces of cold war, decolonization, and globalization. At the same time, she provides an analytic framework for understanding the successes and limits of the ILO's efforts to reform the world of work. The rapid expansion of precarious labor across all types of work and the assault on international institutions by right-wing populist forces makes this an even more compelling achievement.
In this ambitious, insightful, and provocative book, Boris uses the ILO to reveal how notions of who is a worker and what work deserves recognition and reward have changed over the last century. She shows how women shaped this discourse despite their marginalization from decision-making and she makes the case forhow notions of difference - across sex, region, race, and occupation - disadvantaged some and privileged others. Thoroughly grounded in primary sources, her analysis draws from astute readings of multiple scholarly literatures, including the newest research on gender, global labor, and women's history.
This book delivers a clear and detailed account of women in paid and unpaid work based on ILO's century-long history and its transformation, focusing mainly on women who have been more disadvantaged than others in terms of definition, recognition, equal treatment, and empowerment... this outstanding work promises to present a solid narrative of the challenges, failures, victories, and oppositions in the process as well as support, conflict, and tensions among actors involved in the "making of the woman worker" during ILO's 100 years, and the author keeps this promise.
On the centennial of the International Labour Organization (ILO), the transnational body founded after World War I to create global labor standards covering a wide range of workers, Eileen Boris gives us a sweeping 100-year history. She charts the evolution of this crucial body from its almost entirely white, Euro-American, male-dominated origins through the post-World War II era when women from across the Global South began to demand representation and regulation, to the 21st century when women are the majority of activists in a resurgent global labor movement. With verve, keen analysis, and scrupulous attention to detail, Boris takes us inside complex, heated negotiations over the course of the long 20th century that shed light on the ways that, before corporate globalism, labor activists, governments and grass roots workers sought to make a more just world—and, in it, a place for all kinds of woman workers.
Boris has written a lively, interesting, and timely study of women's precarious informal work and intimate labors. Covering a century's worth of documents from the ILO archive, she situates her account within the broader historical forces of cold war, decolonization, and globalization. At the same time, she provides an analytic framework for understanding the successes and limits of the ILO's efforts to reform the world of work. The rapid expansion of precarious labor across all types of work and the assault on international institutions by right-wing populist forces makes this an even more compelling achievement.
In this ambitious, insightful, and provocative book, Boris uses the ILO to reveal how notions of who is a worker and what work deserves recognition and reward have changed over the last century. She shows how women shaped this discourse despite their marginalization from decision-making and she makes the case forhow notions of difference - across sex, region, race, and occupation - disadvantaged some and privileged others. Thoroughly grounded in primary sources, her analysis draws from astute readings of multiple scholarly literatures, including the newest research on gender, global labor, and women's history.
Notă biografică
Eileen Boris is the Hull Professor and Distinguished Professor of Feminist Studies, University of California, Santa Barbara. She is the author, with Jennifer Klein, of Caring for America: Home Health Workers in the Shadow of the Welfare State (Oxford, 2012), which received the Sara A. Whaley Award from the National Women's Studies Association. She serves as President of the International Federation for Research in Women's History, 2015-2020 and received the 2017 Distinguished Service Award to the Field from the Labor and Working-Class History Association. She comments on women's labor in homes and other workplaces in activist and popular as well as scholarly venues.