Making cars in the new India : industry,precarity and informality
By: Barnes, Tom.
Series: Development trajectories in global value chains. Publisher: United Kingdom Cambridge University Press 2018Description: xvi, 261p.ISBN: 9781108433792.Subject(s): Automobile industry Construction industry Trade -- Manufacturing processes -- IndiaDDC classification: 338.3420954 Summary: Auto manufacturing holds the promise of employing many young Indians in relatively well-paid, high-skill employment, but this promise is threatened by the industry's role as a site of immense conflict in recent years. This book asks: how do we explain this conflict? What are the implications of conflict for the ambitious economic development agendas of Indian governments? Based upon extensive field research in India's National Capital Region, this book is the first to focus on labour relations in the Indian auto industry. It proposes the theory that conflict in the auto industry has been driven by twin forces: first, the intersection of global networks of auto manufacturing with regional social structures which have always relied on informal and precariously-employed workers; and, second, the systematic displacement of securely-employed 'regular workers' by waves of precariously-employed 'de facto informal workers'.Item type | Current location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Books | NASSDOC Library | 338.3420954 BAR-M (Browse shelf) | Available | 50249 |
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338.272820973 YET-M Myths of the oil boom | 338.276099442 DAS-; Dynamics of extractive resources in Africa: prospects for India | 338.3 SHI-S Soil not oil: climate change, peak oil and food insecurity | 338.3420954 BAR-M Making cars in the new India | 338.37130954 ART; Artisanal marine fisherfolk of Orissa: study of their technology, economic status, social organization and cognitive patterns | 338.37180954 CHO-B Biodiversity, land-use change and human well-being:a study of aquaculture in the Indian Sunderbans | 338.3727 BLU; Blue revolution and public policy |
includes appendix, bibliography and index
Auto manufacturing holds the promise of employing many young Indians in relatively well-paid, high-skill employment, but this promise is threatened by the industry's role as a site of immense conflict in recent years. This book asks: how do we explain this conflict? What are the implications of conflict for the ambitious economic development agendas of Indian governments? Based upon extensive field research in India's National Capital Region, this book is the first to focus on labour relations in the Indian auto industry. It proposes the theory that conflict in the auto industry has been driven by twin forces: first, the intersection of global networks of auto manufacturing with regional social structures which have always relied on informal and precariously-employed workers; and, second, the systematic displacement of securely-employed 'regular workers' by waves of precariously-employed 'de facto informal workers'.
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