Resilience and reworking practices: Becoming the first-generation of industrial workers in Can Tho, Vietnam

被引:11
|
作者
Hauge, Mads Martinus [1 ]
Fold, Niels [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Copenhagen, Geog Sect, Dept Geosci & Nat Resource Management, Oster Voldgade 10, DK-1350 Copenhagen K, Denmark
关键词
Vietnam; Labor; Agency; Resilience; Reworking; GLOBAL PRODUCTION NETWORKS; LABOR AGENCY;
D O I
10.1016/j.geoforum.2016.10.013
中图分类号
P9 [自然地理学]; K9 [地理];
学科分类号
0705 ; 070501 ;
摘要
For more than a decade, labor geography has stressed the importance of 'giving primacy' to workers in the analysis of global economic restructuring. However, the majority of contributions have focused on organized workers, leaving the issue of individual labor agency much in the dark. The aim of this article is to shed light on the agency of individual workers involved in rapid industrialization processes. In this endeavor we draw inspiration from recent contributions that have integrated Cindi Katz's threefold categorization of agency as reworking, resilience and resistance. In combination with this categorization, we apply a distinction between workers' intentions to enter the industrial labor market and the consequences of doing so (i.e. the outcomes of their engagement). The discrepancy between intentions and outcomes is indicative of labor agency and points to the structural constraints that condition the labor market. The empirical part of the article draws on interviews with local and migrant first-generation workers in two settlements located next to an industrial zone in Can Tho Province in the Mekong River Delta Region of Vietnam. It is suggested that the alternating practices of reworking and resilience can be conceptualized as transformative trajectories - workers' situated knowledge and practices evolve and change over time and is conditioned by the specific labor market contexts through which the individual moves. (C) 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:124 / 133
页数:10
相关论文
共 49 条
  • [1] Becoming first-generation
    Vega, Blanca Elizabeth
    [J]. JOURNAL FOR MULTICULTURAL EDUCATION, 2022, 16 (02) : 171 - 183
  • [2] An uncertain future: climate resilience of first-generation ranchers
    Munden-Dixon, Kate
    Tate, Kenneth
    Cutts, Bethany
    Roche, Leslie
    [J]. RANGELAND JOURNAL, 2019, 41 (03): : 189 - 196
  • [3] Observed parenting practices of first-generation Latino families
    Rodríguez, MD
    Davis, MR
    Rodríguez, J
    Bates, SC
    [J]. JOURNAL OF COMMUNITY PSYCHOLOGY, 2006, 34 (02) : 133 - 148
  • [4] First-Generation Iranian Refugees’ Acculturation in the United States: A Focus on Resilience
    Hormozi T.
    Miller M.M.
    Banford A.
    [J]. Contemporary Family Therapy, 2018, 40 (3) : 276 - 283
  • [5] Evaluation of Street Food Safety and Hygiene Practices of Food Vendors in Can Tho City of Vietnam
    Anh Ngoc Tong Thi
    Kittirath, Pisavanh
    Abiola, Salako Damilola
    Le Nguyen Doan Duy
    Nguyen Cong Ha
    [J]. CURRENT RESEARCH IN NUTRITION AND FOOD SCIENCE, 2021, 9 (01) : 158 - 171
  • [6] Moving Away from One's Origins: Predictors of Becoming a First-Generation College Graduate and Not Becoming a Continuing-Generation Graduate
    Manzoni, Anna
    Streib, Jessi
    [J]. SOCIOLOGICAL QUARTERLY, 2023, 64 (04): : 630 - 650
  • [7] Becoming Academically Eligible: University Enrollment among First-Generation, Rural College Goers*
    Whiteside, Jasmine L.
    [J]. RURAL SOCIOLOGY, 2021, 86 (02) : 204 - 228
  • [8] First-Generation Megacopta cribraria (Hemiptera: Plataspidae) Can Develop on Soybeans
    Del Pozo-Valdivia, A. I.
    Reisig, D. D.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF ECONOMIC ENTOMOLOGY, 2013, 106 (02) : 533 - 535
  • [9] Supporting First-Generation Students' Adjustment to College With High-Impact Practices
    Conefrey, Theresa
    [J]. JOURNAL OF COLLEGE STUDENT RETENTION-RESEARCH THEORY & PRACTICE, 2021, 23 (01) : 139 - 160
  • [10] Breaking the frame: evolving practices of first-generation photo-elicitation researchers
    Dam, S. C.
    [J]. VISUAL STUDIES, 2022, 37 (1-2) : 140 - 153