Global Production Networks, Chronic Poverty and ‘Slave Labour’ in Brazil
Phillips Nicola, 2012
Name of publisher/editor
Springer
Co-author
Leonardo Sakamoto
Geographic area
South America
Summary & key words
For large parts of the world’s poor labour force, participation in global production networks (GPNs) is associated not with poverty reduction and ‘social upgrading’, but with highly precarious, unprotected and exploitative forms of work and employment, resulting in a perpetuation, rather than alleviation, of chronic poverty. In this article, we seek to understand these dynamics of ‘adverse incorporation’ in the context of Brazilian agriculture, focusing on the extreme ends of the spectrum of exploitation associated with what, in Brazil, is usually termed ‘slave labour’. We explore two questions which reveal the circular character of adverse incorporation. First, to what extent, in what ways and under what circumstances does chronic poverty foster patterns of precarious and exploitative employment within GPNs for poor workers? Second, to what extent, in what ways and under what circumstances can the workings of GPNs, and the terms on which poorer workers are incorporated into them, be said to produce and reproduce chronic poverty?