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Farewell to Work? presents the large process of capital's
productive restructuring, triggered in the 1970s-a process with
tendencies to both intellectualize labour power and increase the
levels of the working class' precariousness on a global scale. This
book hypothesizes that instead of work's loss of centrality in
contemporary capitalism, when the world of production is analysed
in its global dimension, including countries in the North and
South, a substantial process of growing heterogeneity, complexity,
and fragmentation is observed. The resulting configuration is a new
morphology of the working class. Therefore, as new mechanisms are
created to generate surplus labour, there is, simultaneously, an
increment in casualisation and unemployment, pushed by the ongoing
corrosion of labour rights in countries all across the globe.
Billions of men and women depend exclusively on their labor to
survive. For them work is not a choice, and yet the restructuring
of the global economy has forced increasing numbers into
unemployment, and eroded the rights and economic gains of those
still on the job. What does this increasing precariousness mean for
today's labor markets?
Farewell to Work? presents the large process of capital's
productive restructuring, triggered in the 1970s. A process with
tendencies to both intellectualize labour power and increase the
levels of working class' precariousness, on a global scale. Its
main hypothesis is that instead of work's loss of centrality in
contemporary capitalism, when the world of production is analysed
in its global dimension, including countries in North and South, a
substantial process of growing heterogeneity, complexity and
fragmentation is observed. This configures a new morphology of the
working class. Therefore, at the same time that new mechanisms are
created to generate surplus labour, there is, simultaneously, an
increment in casualisation and unemployment, pushed by a process of
corrosion of labour rights.
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