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Can solidarity be organized "from below" in global supply chains? The case of ExChains
Author(s) -
Nora Lohmeyer,
Elke Schüßler,
Markus Helfen
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
industrielle beziehungen
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1862-0035
pISSN - 0943-2779
DOI - 10.3224/indbez.v25i4.02
Subject(s) - solidarity , supply chain , context (archaeology) , power (physics) , normative , transformative learning , sociology , economic system , business , political economy , economics , political science , law , marketing , paleontology , pedagogy , physics , quantum mechanics , politics , biology
Global supply chains in the garment industry are marked by labour standard violations in factories as well as retail stores. Against this background it is important to strengthen the bargaining power of workers along the supply chain. Establishing direct relationships among workers along the supply chain could be one way to achieve this aim. This paper builds on extant literature on transnational solidarity and highlights the specific challenges of understanding solidarity in a transnational social space by looking at the empirical context of global garment supply chains. It hereby seeks to go beyond treating “solidarity” as a mere metaphor for any form of transnational union or worker cooperation, and instead engages with the cultural-normative dimensions of the concept as referring to mutual bonds among groups of workers. By looking at the case of the ExChains network, this paper examines some of the opportunities and challenges involved in establishing and maintaining transnational worker solidarity. The paper concludes by discussing the transformative potential, but also the limits of transnational labour solidarity regarding substandard working conditions in global supply chains.

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