Cyber Slavery, Port Cities and Systemic Cruelty

Author:

Liu Joyce C.H.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. National Yang Ming Chiao Tung University Inter-Asia Cultural Studies https://dx.doi.org/34914 Hsin Chu City Taiwan

Abstract

Abstract This article presents a theoretical analysis of the logistics of neoliberal slavery in the 21st century, focusing on the role of the port cities as the hinge in the supply chain through the case of the cyber scam industry of the Sihanoukville Special Economic Zone. The hinge, in a metonymic and metaphorical way, connects a complex mobile networking system with a multi-dimensional and topological dynamism. The overlaid networks consist of a tripartite operation—the production, the market, and the law—and explains the persistence of human interest in profiting from surplus values through human labor extraction, and the violence and cruelty inherent in this. The logic of circulation no longer follows Marx’s analysis of M-C-M or M-M+, but the formula of V-M+. Through void with no cost, and violence with no law, there is no limit to the multiplication of capital.

Publisher

Brill

Reference51 articles.

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3. Buckley, J., and Eckerlein, C. (2020). Cambodian Labour in Chinese-Owned Enterprises in Sihanoukville: An Insight into the Living and Working Conditions of Cambodian Labourers in the Construction, Casino and Manufacturing Sectors. sozialpolitik.ch.—2020, vol. 2, no. 2, p. Forum: 2.2. https://sonar.ch/global/documents/309049

4. Campling, L., and Colás, A. (2021). Capitalism and the Sea. London and New York: Verso.

5. Chen, L. (陳連慶) (1988). 秦代的奴隸問題 (On the Question of Slaves in the Qin Dynasty). 東北師大學報 (Northeast Normal University Journal) 5, pp. 35–42.

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