Abstract
Abstract
This chapter explores how labour legislation, the official union ACFTU, labour NGOs, and workers organize around precarity to improve labour conditions of migrant informal workers in a changing China. Historically, it traces the shift from employment and livelihood security during the Maoist decades to labour precarity in the post-Mao three key phases: (1) the phase from 1978 to the late 1990s when employment contracting and precarity are seeded, fertilized, and legitimized in law; (2) the phase from the late 1990s to 2011 when contracting and precarity deepen and new ways of protecting and organizing workers emerge, especially under the Hu-Wen administration; (3) the phase from 2012 onwards under Xi’s government, which marks the decline of labour NGOs, the stalling of trade union reforms, and the deepening of digital forms of labour precarity. In conclusion, the chapter considers the prospects for challenging precarity through organized resistance, particularly with respective to new challenges and opportunities arising from the rise of the gig economy
Publisher
Oxford University PressOxford
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