ABSTRACT
This book discusses the transformation of labour movements and trade unionism in post-liberalised India. It looks at emerging collectivism, both in formal and informal sectors, and relates it to changing political and industrial relations. Bringing together studies of resistance, struggles and new forms of negotiations from different industries –agriculture, fisheries, brick kiln, plantations, IT, domestic workers, shipbreakers, sex workers, and miners –this book exposes the myths, realities and challenges that the present generation of workers in India face and struggle with. With contributions from leading thinkers in the field, the work deepens the understanding of the current Indian labour spaces, possibilities for contestations and articulations from below.
The volume will be useful to students and researchers of labour studies, economics, sociology, development studies and public policy. It will be an invaluable resource to those engaged with industrial relations, trade unions, human rights, social exclusion as well as labour organisations and research institutions.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part I|77 pages
The contemporary Indian labour space
part II|86 pages
Responding to informality
chapter 7|21 pages
Domestic workers’ movement in Maharashtra
part III|94 pages
New articulations
chapter 8|27 pages
New identities require new strategies
chapter 9|18 pages
The SEWA Lok Swasthya Mandali
chapter 11|23 pages
Organising the unorganised
part IV|66 pages
The new waves