Front-Line Workers in the Global Service Economy

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A01=Giovanna Fullin
Author_Giovanna Fullin
Category=JHBL
Category=JP
Category=KCF
Category=KNSX
chain stores
Clothing Retail
Coalition Building Strategies
collective action
Collective Agreements
Collective Bargaining Agreements
comparative retail labor research
devaluation
employment insecurity
eq_bestseller
eq_business-finance-law
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
fashion
fast fashion
Fitting Rooms
Fixed Term Contracts
Fixed Term Labor Contracts
FPI
Front Line Service Workers
front-line
Front-line workers
global
Global service economy
globalization
Human Resources Management Strategies
Internal Work Organization
Italian institutional settings
Italian Labor Market
Italian Trade Unions
Italian Unions
labor costs
labor precarity
Low Skilled Service Workers
Low Wage Service Workers
Low-skilled service sectors
low-skilled workers
Mass Fashion
Open Ended Contracts
Peripheral Labor Force
Peripheral Segment
qualitative fieldwork
Rap
resistance
retail
Retail Workers
salespersons
service economy
service sector ethnography
standardization
Temporary Agency Worker
UK Retail Sector
union avoidance strategies
unionists
Unionization Process
workers
workplace standardization

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032005584
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 18 Jun 2021
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Walking around the commercial streets of New York, San Francisco, Milan, London, or Paris and looking at the succession of multinational chain stores’ windows, you can easily forget what country you are in. However, if you hear the small talk among the employees, you hear very different stories. In New York, a 30-year-old woman is worried because she does not know if she will work enough hours to make a living the following week—whereas, in Milan, a mother of the same age knows she will work 20 hours a week but is concerned about whether her contract will be renewed at the end of the following month.

Following three years of fieldwork, which included 100 in-depth interviews with front-line retail workers and unionists in New York City and Milan, Front-Line Workers in the Global Service Economy investigates both the lived experiences of salespersons in the "fast fashion" industry—a retail sector made of large chains of stores selling fashion garments at low prices—and the possibilities of collective action and structured forms of resistance to these global trends. In the face of economic globalization and vigorous managerial efforts to minimize labor costs and to standardize the retail experience, mass fashion workers’ stories tell us how strong the pressure toward work devaluation in low-skilled service sectors can be, and how devastating its effects are on the workers themselves.

Giovanna Fullin is an Associate Professor of Economic Sociology at the Department of Sociology and Social Research at University of Milano-Bicocca, Italy.

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