Contingent Work, Disrupted Lives: Labour and Community in the New Rural EconomyUniversity of Toronto Press, 2002 M11 23 - 192 páginas Contingent Work, Disrupted Lives examines the repercussions of economic globalization on several manufacturing-dependent rural communities in Canada. Foregrounding a distinct interest in the 'grassroots' effects of such contemporary corporate strategies as plant closures and downsizing, authors Anthony Winson and Belinda Leach consider the impact of this restructuring on the residents of various communities. The authors argue that the new rural economy involves a fundamental shift in the stability and security of people's lives and, ultimately, it causes wrenching change and an arduous struggle as rural dwellers struggle to rebuild their lives in the new economic terrain. Beginning with broader theoretical and empirical literature on global changes in the economy and the effects of these changes on labour, the text then focuses exploration on manufacturing in Ontario with an analysis of five community case studies. Winson and Leach give considerable attention to the testimony of numerous residents; they report on in-depth interviews with key respondents and blue-collar workers in five separate communities, ranging from diverse manufacturing towns to single-industry settlements. The result is an intimate contextual knowledge of the workers' lives and their attempts to adapt to the tumultuous economic terrain of 1990s rural Canada. Winner of the John Porter Prize for 2003, awarded by the Canadian Sociology and Anthropology Association. |
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... urban context. We, on the other hand, are more concerned with how the wider political economy impinges on our communities over time, and what factors in the community shape the way in which external pressures are handled locally ...
... urban, industrial studies (Creed and Ching 1997). In contrast, rural communities are microcosms of change, and as such they represent a sociological entity that is a manageable unit for study and analysis. However, it might seem ...
... urban ones, including inadequate health care (the shortage of rural doctors and the closing of small-town hospitals are but two examples frequently in the Ontario news) and social service provision (the lack of rural child care spaces ...
... urban centres, although in the early part of the Industrial Revolution it had a decidedly rural character. At the beginning of the Industrial Revolution, manufacturing flourished in the still densely populated English countryside. This ...
... urban industry by buying up urban companies and relocating production in rural areas where they set up non-union plants and hired women and visible minority workers. As Fink shows, the new industry built on existing rural ideas about ...
Contenido
CHAPTER THREECommunity Sketches History and Method | |
CHAPTER FOURThe New Rural Economy and the Shape of Restructuring | |
CHAPTER FIVESkidding into the Contingent Work World | |
LayOff and the New Reality of Contingent Labour | |
CHAPTER SEVENEconomic Diversity Sustainability and Manufacturing Communities | |
CHAPTER EIGHTSome Concluding Thoughts | |
Notes | |
Glossary | |
References | |
Index | |
Studies in Comparative Political Economy and Public Policy | |
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Contingent Work, Disrupted Lives: Labour and Community in the New Rural Economy Anthony Winson,Belinda Leach Vista previa limitada - 2002 |
Contingent Work, Disrupted Lives: Labour and Community in the New Rural Economy Anthony Winson,Belinda Leach Sin vista previa disponible - 2002 |