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Across the world, workers labor without pay for the benefit of
profitable businesses - and it's legal. Labor trends like
outsourcing and technology hide some workers, and branding and
employer mandates erase others. Invisible workers who remain
under-protected by wage laws include retail workers who function as
walking billboards and take payment in clothing discounts or
prestige; waitstaff at "breastaurants" who conform their bodies to
a business model; and inventory stockers at grocery stores who go
hungry to complete their shifts. Invisible Labor gathers essays by
prominent sociologists and legal scholars to illuminate how and why
such labor has been hidden from view.
Across the world, workers labor without pay for the benefit of
profitable businesses - and it's legal. Labor trends like
outsourcing and technology hide some workers, and branding and
employer mandates erase others. Invisible workers who remain
under-protected by wage laws include retail workers who function as
walking billboards and take payment in clothing discounts or
prestige; waitstaff at "breastaurants" who conform their bodies to
a business model; and inventory stockers at grocery stores who go
hungry to complete their shifts. Invisible Labor gathers essays by
prominent sociologists and legal scholars to illuminate how and why
such labor has been hidden from view.
Borders in Service traces the intersection of service labour and
national identity across global call centres in seven countries: El
Salvador, Guatemala, Guyana, Mauritius, Morocco, the Philippines,
and the US-Mexico border. While most studies on offshore call
centres have focused on India this collection explores the
experiences of call center workers in many of the newly emerging
hubs of transnational service work. In this collection, Kiran
Mirchandani and Winifred Poster have gathered a wide range of
contributors to explore the dynamics within global call centres.
Such dynamics include: language, speech, accent issues, expressions
of consumer sentiment, physical space, and organizational, human
resource, and labour policies. By grounding the theoretical debates
on nationhood and labour in the realities of daily life in global
call centres, Mirchandani and Poster have created a timely,
accessible and revealing collection that will change what we know
about offshored customer service work.
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