Structural Injustice and Workers' Rights
Book Details
Format
Hardback or Cased Book
Book Series
Oxford Labour Law
ISBN-10
0192857150
ISBN-13
9780192857156
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Imprint
Oxford University Press
Country of Manufacture
GB
Country of Publication
GB
Publication Date
Mar 10th, 2023
Print length
208 Pages
Weight
454 grams
Dimensions
16.30 x 24.10 x 1.80 cms
Ksh 19,750.00
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This book seeks to identify structures that trap workers in conditions of exploitation. It focuses specifically on 'state mediated structural injustice', where legislative schemes that promote otherwise legitimate aims create inadvertent vulnerabilities for workers.
When discussing exploitation in workplaces, governments typically deploy a rhetoric of personal responsibility: they place attention on employers who take advantage of workers, or on workers who choose non-standard, precarious work arrangements. On this account, the responsibility of the state is to address the harm inflicted by private actors.
This book questions that approach and develops the concept of ''state-mediated structural injustice at work'': a phenomenon which manifests when legislation that has an appearance of legitimacy, in fact has very damaging effects for large numbers of people and results in structures of exploitation at work. Using a series of examples such as migrant workers, captive workers, people under welfare conditionality schemes, and other precarious workers, Mantouvalou shows how the law creates these structures of injustice, entrenching long-term, standard, and routine exploitation. She also assesses these examples against human rights principles, including civil, political, economic, and social rights. The ultimate aim of the work is to show that these structures routinely lead to workers'' exploitation which may in turn give rise to state responsibility for human rights violations and to argue that there is a pressing need for reform.
This book questions that approach and develops the concept of ''state-mediated structural injustice at work'': a phenomenon which manifests when legislation that has an appearance of legitimacy, in fact has very damaging effects for large numbers of people and results in structures of exploitation at work. Using a series of examples such as migrant workers, captive workers, people under welfare conditionality schemes, and other precarious workers, Mantouvalou shows how the law creates these structures of injustice, entrenching long-term, standard, and routine exploitation. She also assesses these examples against human rights principles, including civil, political, economic, and social rights. The ultimate aim of the work is to show that these structures routinely lead to workers'' exploitation which may in turn give rise to state responsibility for human rights violations and to argue that there is a pressing need for reform.
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