Women Workers in Turkey: Global Industrial Production in Istanbul
By (Author) Saniye Dedeoglu
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
I.B. Tauris
1st June 2012
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Industry and industrial studies
Gender studies: women and girls
331.409561
232
Width 138mm, Height 216mm
299g
Globalisation is often considered as not only generating jobs, but also having a negative effect on those at the bottom of the labour supply chain. Here Saniye Dedeoglu shows us exactly how globalisation has affected women engaged in insecure, invisible and low/unpaid garment work. Through a close ethnographic study of women workers in Istanbul's garment industry, she reveals how industries have adapted their labour demands to make use of local female labour supplies, and highlights the strategies and responses that have evolved in response to contemporary changes in global industrial production in Turkey. Dedeoglu shows how production for global markets has seeped into local labour markets, contributing to a culture of work which is informal and whose participants are often invisible. "Women Workers in Turkey" throws up the critical question of what it means to be a woman in today's globalised society, and is an important contribution to the various perspectives on the social and economic consequences of globalization to the least priviliged in industrial socieities.
""A well-grounded contribution to the debates on women's economics activities, gender ideologies and industrial production in Turkey."" - Professor Yildiz Ecevit, Director of Geneder and Women Studies, Department of Sociology, Middle East Technical University
Saniye Dedeoglu is Marie Curie Fellow at the Centre for Research in Ethnic Relations at the University of Warwick, UK, and Assistant Professor in the Department of Labour Economics at the University of la, Turkey. She holds a PhD from the Department of Development Studies at SOAS, University of London, and is co-editor of Gender and Society in Turkey: The Impact of Neoliberal Policies, Political Islam and EU Accession (I.B.Tauris, 2012).