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Structural injustice and workers' rights

Title
Structural injustice and workers' rights / Virginia Mantouvalou.
ISBN
0192857150
9780192857156
9780192671387
0192671383
Edition
First edition.
Publication
Oxford : Oxford University Press, 2023.
Physical Description
xvii, 186 pages ; 24 cm.
Summary
When discussing exploitation in workplaces, governments typically deploy a rhetoric of personal responsibility. They place attention on employers who take advantage of workers, or on workers who choose non-standard, precarious work arrangements. On this account, the responsibility of the state is to address the harm inflicted by private actors. This book questions the heavy focus on individual responsibility for precarious work and develops the concept of 'state-mediated structural injustice at work'. We observe this when legislation that has an appearance of legitimacy has effects that are very damaging for large numbers of people, constituting a major cause of structures of exploitation at work. The book uses a series of examples, such as migrant workers, captive workers, people under welfare conditionality schemes and other precarious workers, to show how the law creates structures of injustice, making exploitation long-term, standard and routine. It also assesses these examples against human rights principles - both civil and political and economic and social rights. The aim of the book is to show that both the overall structures and parts of those structures routinely lead to workers' exploitation that may give rise to state responsibility for human rights violations, and that there is a pressing need for reform.
Format
Books
Language
English
Added to Catalog
July 18, 2023
Series
Oxford labour law.
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents
Part 1 What is structural injustice?
Introduction: structural injustice and workers’ rights
Structures of injustice at work
Part II Illustrations of state-mediated structural injustice
Migrant workers
Captive workers
Welfare-to-work
Precarious workers
Part III Human Rights
Human Rights I
Human Rights II
Epilogue.
Citation

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