کد مقاله | کد نشریه | سال انتشار | مقاله انگلیسی | نسخه تمام متن |
---|---|---|---|---|
1061968 | 947921 | 2012 | 10 صفحه PDF | دانلود رایگان |

In this article we argue for the continuing relevance of the national scale in understanding the geographies that shape and constrain labor agency. Recent contributions to labor geography have held that some of the central concepts used to understand the transformative capacities of labor, such as agency and scale, are under-theorized. On the basis of our study of the emergent labor movement in the Chilean aquaculture industry, we suggest that this field suffers from what we term “glocalocentrism”, which overshadows the fundamental importance of structures and processes that are primarily scaled nationally. With the labor repression of the Pinochet regime imprinted in current national institutions and organizational traditions, the aquaculture sector was able to develop in southern Chile from the early 1980s onwards, without a significant union movement to press workers’ claims, and it benefited from exploitative practices and low wages. The first company level unions did not appear until the late 1980s, and a national confederation of aquaculture unions was formed as late as 2006. After the outbreak of the ISA virus in 2007, thousands of workers were left unemployed, and the young union movement struggled for state intervention and programs, with some success. International networks brought attention to the issue, but structures and processes at the national level conditioned the possibilities for the emergent labor movement to press its claims successfully.
► In this paper we suggest that labor geography suffers from a ‘glocalocentrism’ that overshadows the fundamental importance of structures and processes that are primarily nationally scaled.
► The paper shows how structures and processes at the national scale are fundamental to understand the factors that condition and constrain the capacities of organized labor.
► We use a case study of the emergent aquaculture sector union movement in Chile to substantiate our theoretical arguments, bringing a rare Global South case into the labor geography literature.
Journal: Political Geography - Volume 31, Issue 2, February 2012, Pages 94–103