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Work, Inequalities and Sustainability in Global Value Chains - Detailseite

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Grunddaten
Veranstaltungsart Seminar Veranstaltungsnummer 53950
Semester SoSe 2022 SWS 2
Rhythmus keine Übernahme Moodle-Link  
Veranstaltungsstatus Freigegeben für Vorlesungsverzeichnis  Freigegeben  Sprache englisch
Belegungsfrist Es findet keine Online-Belegung über AGNES statt!
Veranstaltungsformat Präsenz

Termine

Gruppe 1
Tag Zeit Rhythmus Dauer Raum Gebäude Raum-
plan
Lehrperson Status Bemerkung fällt aus am Max. Teilnehmer/-innen
Mi. 16:00 bis 18:00 wöch 2.21 (Seminarraum)
Stockwerk: 2. OG


Han27-Haus 12 / Institutsgebäude - Hannoversche Straße 27 (HN27-H12)

  findet statt     30
Gruppe 1:
 


Zugeordnete Person
Zugeordnete Person Zuständigkeit
Sardadvar, Karin , Dr.
Studiengänge
Abschluss Studiengang LP Semester
Master of Arts  Geschl.stud./Gender Stud. Hauptfach ( Vertiefung: kein LA; POVersion: 2014 )   -  
Zuordnung zu Einrichtungen
Einrichtung
Kultur-, Sozial- und Bildungswissenschaftliche Fakultät, Zentrum für Transdisziplinäre Geschlechterstudien
Inhalt
Kommentar

This seminar looks at global value chains and their links to sustainability issues, labour migration, and gender relations. It addresses these issues mainly from a work research approach. How is work organized, and gendered, in value chains across borders? Who benefits from them, and at whose expense? What do they imply for peoples’ working conditions?

In the theoretical part of the course, important terms and concepts will be discussed. Core terms like value chains, commodity chains and care chains will be clarified. Furthermore, we will look at concepts of social inequality, social sustainability, and sustainable work. What is work, how can we define it, and what does it have to do with sustainability? Which alternative models of work have been suggested in research on sustainability, and in feminist theory?  

The second part of the course illustrates the topic with selected empirical examples. They will be taken primarily from the fields of care work, service work, and food production. As such, we will read and discuss empirical studies on, among other things, work in global care chains, work in the meat industry, and work in harvest help. A special focus will be set on the question what happened to these areas of work during the corona pandemic, or, in some cases, what the pandemic made more visible about them.

The course builds on the theoretical perspectives taught in the course “Gender, Environment and Sustainability: Theory and Debates” by Meike Brückner.

Literatur

References

Bair, Jennifer (2005): Global Capitalism and Commodity Chains: Looking Back, Going Forward. Competition & Change 9(2), 153–180.

Bauhardt, Christine/Harcourt, Wendy (2019): Feminist Political Ecology and the Economics of Care. In Search of Economic Alternatives. London, New York: Routledge.

Edgell, Stephen/Granter, Edward (2020): The Sociology of Work. Continuity and Change in Paid and Unpaid Work. London et al.: Sage. Chapter 10: Globalization: Paid and Unpaid Work, 283–308.

Haidinger, Bettina/Schönauer, Annika/Flecker, Jörg/Holtgrewe, Ursula (2014): Value Chains and Networks in Services: Crossing Borders, Crossing Sectors, Crossing Regimes? In: In Hauptmeier, Marco & Vidal, Matt (eds.): Comparative Political Economy of Work. London: Bloomsbury.

Littig, Beate (2018): Good work? Sustainable work and sustainable development: a critical gender perspective from the Global North. Globalizations 15(9), 1–15.

Strukturbaum

Keine Einordnung ins Vorlesungsverzeichnis vorhanden. Veranstaltung ist aus dem Semester SoSe 2022. Aktuelles Semester: SoSe 2025.
Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin | Unter den Linden 6 | D-10099 Berlin