Issue #3
Chinese Labour in a Global Perspective
July–September 2017
In today’s globalised and interconnected world, Chinese labour issues have become much more than merely a local matter. With China’s political and economic power increasing by the day, it is imperative not only to assess how this growing influence affects labour relations in other countries, but also to abandon an ‘exceptional’ view of China by engaging in more comparative research. In this sense, the study of Chinese labour indeed provides a powerful lens—or perhaps a mirror—to further our understanding of the contemporary world and our potential futures. With this aim in mind, in this issue we publish a series of essays that either frame Chinese labour comparatively or examine its transnational implications.
Table of Contents
Op-eds
Treating What Ails the Study of Chinese Politics | William HurstLet a Hundred Flowers Bloom: A Response to William Hurst on the Field of Chinese Politics | Christian Sorace
Beyond the Great Paywall: A Lesson from the Cambridge University Press China Incident | Nicholas Loubere and Ivan Franceschini
Focus
Chinese Multinational Corporations in Europe: Racing to the Bottom? | Zheng Yu and Chris SmithLiquid Labourscape: Ad Hoc Experimentation in a Chinese Special Economic Zone in Laos | Antonella Diana
Outsourcing Exploitation: Chinese and Cambodian Garment Workers Compared | Ivan Franceschini
Trade Union Reform in One-Party States: China and Vietnam Compared | Anita Chan
Prospects for US-China Union Relations in the Era of Xi and Trump | Katie Quan