Contested Understandings in the Global Garment Industry after Rana Plaza
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In: Development and Change, Vol. 51, No. 5, 01.09.2020, p. 1296-1305.
Research output: Journal contributions › Journal articles › Research › peer-review
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Contested Understandings in the Global Garment Industry after Rana Plaza
AU - Ashwin, Sarah
AU - Kabeer, Naila
AU - Schüßler, Elke
N1 - The contributions in this cluster are part of the project ‘Changes in the Governance of Garment Global Production Networks: Lead Firm, Supplier and Institutional Responses to the Rana Plaza Disaster’, funded by the Volkswagen Foundation under its Europe and Global Challenges programme, whose support we gratefully acknowledge. Publisher Copyright: © 2020 The Authors. Development and Change published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of International Institute of Social Studies
PY - 2020/9/1
Y1 - 2020/9/1
N2 - This Introduction synthesizes the key themes of this special cluster of articles and explores the implications of the three contributions on garment supply chains after the Rana Plaza disaster. The three articles examine the perspectives of key stakeholders in garment value chains — global buyers, managers of garment factories in Bangladesh, and workers at these factories — and analyses their responses to the new governance initiatives that emerged in the aftermath of Rana Plaza. Placing the contrasting perspectives of these stakeholders alongside each other starkly reveals how their different positions within hierarchically organized global value chains form the particular lens through which they view post-Rana Plaza initiatives. This special cluster scrutinizes the particular understandings of these stakeholders and reveals the very different capacity for voice and influence that they bring to bear in shaping outcomes. It reflects on the contradictory imperatives faced by actors in the garment industry caught between a logic of competition on the one hand and global labour standards norms on the other. The Introduction concludes by examining the prospects for a re-embedding of the market in global value chains via the activation of civil society.
AB - This Introduction synthesizes the key themes of this special cluster of articles and explores the implications of the three contributions on garment supply chains after the Rana Plaza disaster. The three articles examine the perspectives of key stakeholders in garment value chains — global buyers, managers of garment factories in Bangladesh, and workers at these factories — and analyses their responses to the new governance initiatives that emerged in the aftermath of Rana Plaza. Placing the contrasting perspectives of these stakeholders alongside each other starkly reveals how their different positions within hierarchically organized global value chains form the particular lens through which they view post-Rana Plaza initiatives. This special cluster scrutinizes the particular understandings of these stakeholders and reveals the very different capacity for voice and influence that they bring to bear in shaping outcomes. It reflects on the contradictory imperatives faced by actors in the garment industry caught between a logic of competition on the one hand and global labour standards norms on the other. The Introduction concludes by examining the prospects for a re-embedding of the market in global value chains via the activation of civil society.
KW - Management studies
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85080064830&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/3d844ac5-20d9-3dd8-ad8b-56aa8b1e7df6/
U2 - 10.1111/dech.12573
DO - 10.1111/dech.12573
M3 - Journal articles
AN - SCOPUS:85080064830
VL - 51
SP - 1296
EP - 1305
JO - Development and Change
JF - Development and Change
SN - 0012-155X
IS - 5
ER -