ABSTRACT

This book offers wide-ranging insights into the organising capacities of workers in Asia today. Nine case-studies examine workers' responses to class relations through independent unions, non-government organisations (NGOs) and more (dis)organised struggles. Countering the notion that globalisation holds entirely negative consequences for labour organisation, the authors reveal some of the openings for local activism which can arise from transnational production arrangements.
The volume covers the "second-tier" industrializers - China, Thailand, Malaysia, the Philippines, Indonesia, India and Bangladesh. Interdisciplinary in nature, it will be of great interest to students and scholars of Asian studies, development studies and international labour studies.

chapter |19 pages

Export opportunities

Unions in the Philippine garments industry

chapter |20 pages

New organising vehicles in Indonesia

Origins and prospects

chapter |21 pages

After the Kader fire

Labour organising for health and safety standards in Thailand

chapter |19 pages

Sangharsh 1

Workers' interventions in the privatisation of Indian telecommunications

chapter |27 pages

Class and national identity

The case of Filipino migrant workers