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Precarious work: A global perspective
Authors:Kwang-Yeong Shin  Arne L. Kalleberg  Kevin Hewison
Affiliation:1. Sociology, Chung-Ang University, Seoul, South Korea;2. Sociology, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, North Carolina, Chapel Hill, USA;3. Department of Asian Middle Eastern Studies, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, North Carolina, Chapel Hill, USA
Abstract:Precarious work is universal, though its forms and consequences vary across countries due to institutional, cultural, and historical differences. This article reviews recent research on precarious work from a global perspective, emphasizing the comparative and interdisciplinary research needed for a comprehensive understanding of the structural transformations in contemporary capitalism that promote precarious work. The article has three foci. First, research that details the diverse forms of precarious work, which have become increasingly heterogeneous as national labor markets have been interwoven with global production networks. Second, research on precarious work that emphasizes its disparate impacts for women, youth, the elderly, racial and ethnic minority groups, and migrants, revealing an articulation of precarity and social cleavages. Third, research on the politics associated with precarious work and how some precarious workers have successfully organized and mobilized their interests, such as by unionizing and becoming involved in electoral politics. Still, questions remain regarding precarious work: how precarious workers differ from regular workers in representing their interests and demands and whether precarious workers are a new, independent social class or remain part of a changing working class. Finally, topics for future research on the global dimensions of precarious work are discussed.
Keywords:informal sector  precarious work  precarity  self-employment  standard employment relation  unionization  working class
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