Article contents
Precarious Class Formations in the United States and South Africa
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 April 2016
Abstract
Recent scholarship highlights the global expansion of precarious layers of the working class. This article examines the growth and collective struggles of such precarious layers in two very different places: California, United States and Gauteng, South Africa. The comparison challenges and extends existing research in two ways. First, it shows that the spread of insecurity is far from uniform, taking different forms in different places. Lack of citizenship is more crucial for workers in California, whereas underemployment is more crucial for workers in Gauteng. Second, it shows that insecure segments of the working class are capable of developing collective agency. This agency may be rooted in identities that extend beyond precarious employment, and will reflect the particular forms of insecurity that are prevalent in the given context. Such diversity is illustrated by examining May Day protests in California and community protests around service delivery in Gauteng.
- Type
- Precarious Labor in Global Perspectives
- Information
- International Labor and Working-Class History , Volume 89: Precarious Labor in Global Perspectives , Spring 2016 , pp. 84 - 106
- Copyright
- Copyright © International Labor and Working-Class History, Inc. 2016
References
NOTES
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49. See Table 4 for sources.
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