ABSTRACT

Routledge Handbook on Labour in Construction and Human Settlements presents a detailed and comprehensive examination of the relationship between labour and the built environment, and synergises these critical focus areas in innovative ways. This unrivalled edited collection of chapters analyses problems and presents possible solutions related to the employment and conditions of workers in the construction industry. It provides comprehensive coverage of the relationship between the global workforce and the built environment and is divided into four topical areas: how labour and the built environment relate to development; employment generation in the built environment; quality of employment in the built environment; and the impact of the built environment on labour in other sectors.

Underpinning the entire book is the premise that the way the built environment is produced, and its main products – buildings, cities and towns – have an impact on large numbers of workers. At the same time, the quality of the built environment requires construction workers who are well trained and with good working conditions. While cities and towns are the engines of economic growth, they will not be able to fulfil their economic potential if poverty in the workforce is not addressed. Those who are unemployed, underemployed or work in unfavourable conditions cannot fully contribute to production, and at the same time are limited in their ability to purchase goods and services – therefore limiting economic growth and restricting improvements in their living standards. In addition, investments in infrastructure, housing and inner-city redevelopment cannot be sustainable if labour issues – i.e., poverty – are not addressed. This book aims at analysing this complex set of issues comprehensively and will be essential reading to a wide range of researchers across the interdisciplinary intersections of construction, business and management, economic development, urban studies, sociology, political science and project management.

chapter 4|13 pages

Employment generation in the construction sector

Volatility and prospects

chapter 8|21 pages

The precariat of the built environment

Decent work and the myth of Sisyphus

chapter 10|15 pages

Culture in construction

A driver as well as a barrier for the improvement of labour situations within construction industry

chapter 12|17 pages

Mistreatment of migrant construction workers

Trajectory from the past to the present and into the future

chapter 13|18 pages

The smart city as the factory of the twenty-first century?

How urban platforms reshape the nexus between the built environment, livelihoods, and labour

chapter 14|21 pages

Housing markets and labour markets

Towards a new research agenda for the Global South

chapter 15|12 pages

Social innovation of workplaces in the built environment

How public spaces have become central workplaces – Lessons from Kampala City, Uganda

chapter 16|22 pages

Building resilient workplaces

Prioritizing safety and disaster risk reduction for the global workforce

chapter 17|16 pages

Impact of community on construction projects

Lessons from South Africa

chapter 18|10 pages

Labour, the built environment and human settlements

Lessons from the book