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Building China: Informal Work and the New Precariat

English

By (author): Sarah Swider

Roughly 260 million workers in China have participated in a mass migration of peasants moving into the cities, and construction workers account for almost half of them. In Building China, Sarah Swider draws on her research in Beijing, Guangzhou, and Shanghai between 2004 and 2012, including living in an enclave, working on construction jobsites, and interviews with eighty-three migrants, managers, and labor contractors. This ethnography focuses on the lives, work, family, and social relations of construction workers. It adds to our understanding of Chinas new working class, the deepening rural-urban divide, and the growing number of undocumented migrants working outside the protection of labor laws and regulation. Swider shows how these migrantsmembers of the global precariat, an emergent social force based on vulnerability, insecurity, and uncertaintyare changing Chinas class structure and what this means for the prospects for an independent labor movement.

The workers who build and serve Chinese cities, along with those who produce goods for the world to consume, are mostly migrant workers. They, or their parents, grew up in the countryside; they are farmers who left the fields and migrated to the cities to find work. Informal workerswho represent a large segment of the emerging workforcedo not fit the traditional model of industrial wage workers. Although they have not been incorporated into the new legal framework that helps define and legitimize Chinas decentralized legal authoritarian regime, they have emerged as a central component of Chinas economic success and an important source of labor resistance.

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Product Details
  • Weight: 454g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 15 Oct 2015
  • Publisher: Cornell University Press
  • Publication City/Country: United States
  • Language: English
  • ISBN13: 9780801454158

About Sarah Swider

Sarah Swider is Assistant Professor of Sociology at Wayne State University.

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