05268nam 2200625 450 991081780210332120230803201705.092-2-127803-4(CKB)3710000000082924(EBL)1590989(SSID)ssj0001127993(PQKBManifestationID)11959509(PQKBTitleCode)TC0001127993(PQKBWorkID)11058335(PQKB)10687052(MiAaPQ)EBC1590989(Au-PeEL)EBL1590989(CaPaEBR)ebr10822280(OCoLC)868925220(EXLCZ)99371000000008292420130812d2014 uy| 0engurcnu||||||||txtccrTowards better work understanding labour in apparel global value chains /edited by Arianna Rossi, Amy Luinstra and John PicklesBasingstoke :Palgrave Macmillan,2014.1 online resource (339 p.)Advances in labour studiesDescription based upon print version of record.92-2-127802-6 Cover; Contents; List of Figures, Tables and Boxes; Figures; Tables; Boxes; Preface; Notes on Contributors; List of Abbreviations; Introduction; Figure I.1 Apparel production system; Part I; 1 Re-embedding the Market: Global Apparel Value Chains, Governance and Decent Work; Box 1.1 China's Labour Contract Law; 2 Economic and Social Upgrading of Developing Countries in the Global Apparel Sector: Insights from Using a Parsimonious Measurement Approach; Table 2.1 Country sample; Table 2.2 Top 15 apparel exporters in 2010Table 2.3 Apparel exports (in million US) and world export market shares (%), 2000-2010 Table 2.4 Aggregated apparel export unit values (in US/kilogram); Figure 2.1 Economic upgrading and downgrading in the apparel sector,2004-2009; Table 2.5 Employment in the apparel sector, 2000-2009; Table 2.6 Nominal wages and labour costs in the apparel sector (in US), 2000-2009; Figure 2.2 Social upgrading and downgrading in the apparel sector, 2004-2009; Figure 2.3 Prototype matrix of 'overall upgrading/downgrading'; Figure 2.4 'Overall upgrading and downgrading' in the apparel sector, 2004-20093 How 'Fair' Are Wage Practices along the Supply Chain? A Global Assessment Box 3.1 Definition of fair wages; Table 3.1 The 12 fair wage dimensions; Figure 3.1 Regional distribution of suppliers; Figure 3.2 Enterprises with dual records (%); Figure 3.3 Enterprises with payment problems (%); Figure 3.4 Enterprises with payment problems (%), by country; Figure 3.5 Companies' starting wage compared to minimum wage (MW); Figure 3.6 Starting wage compared to minimum wage (% of enterprises); Figure 3.7 Enterprises paying social security contributions (%)Figure 3.8 Enterprises providing paid holidays (%)Figure 3.9 Payment of prevailing wage (PW); Table 3.2 Wage disparity between workers at the top and those at the bottom (between highest and lowest wages), 2010; Figure 3.10 Number of hours worked per week; Figure 3.11 Percentage of companies underpaying overtime; Table 3.3 Nominal wages increases compared to price increases, 2008-2010; Table 3.4 Pay systems by country (use of disciplinary cuts and wage grids), 2010; Table 3.5 Piece rate (PR) systems, by country, 2010; Table 3.6 Wage structure (bonuses), by country, 2010Table 3.7 Provision of non-monetary benefits, by country, 2010 Table 3.8 Communication on wages, by country, 2010; Table 3.9 Percentage of companies where workers were aware of their wage and benefits; Table 3.10 Social dialogue practices, by country, 2010; Table 3.11 Overview of the three companies; Table 3.12 Main employment and wage developments in the three companies,China; Table 3.13 Companies' starting and average wages compared to the Asia Floor Wage, China; Table 3.14 Top-down wage gap in the three companies; Table 3.15 Companies' wage structure, China, 2011Table 3.16 Fair wage performance of the three companies, ChinaThis new volume analyses how workers, governments and business can collaborate in order to confront the key opportunities and challenges affecting labour in apparel global value chains. It provides new empirical insights into the garment sector in Asia (Cambodia, India, Lao People's Democratic Republic), Europe (Romania), Africa (Lesotho, Morocco) and the Americas (Haiti, Nicaragua), with a focus on wages, worker empowerment and the institutional contexts facilitating or hampering the attainment of improved working conditions.Advances in Labour StudiesClothing workersSupply and demandManufacturing industriesEmployeesSupply and demandClothing workersSupply and demand.Manufacturing industriesEmployeesSupply and demand.331.12587Rossi Arianna1613104Luinstra Amy1613105Pickles John1952-623816MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910817802103321Towards better work3942229UNINA