Third World Quarterly
Volume 29, Issue 7, 2008, Pages 1431-1447

Migrant workers in the ILO's Global Alliance Against Forced Labour report: A critical appraisal (Article)

Rogaly B.
  • a [Affiliation not available]

Abstract

Temporary migration for agricultural work has long historical provenance globally, and has increased in the most recent period of globalisation. In this paper, using examples based on my own research on both cross-border (to the UK) and internal (within India) migration by workers for temporary agricultural jobs, I raise questions about how such movements, and the labour relations with which they are associated, have been represented in global and regional analyses. The discussion is set within a summary of recent debates over the usefulness of the concept of geographical scale. I use as a case study the ilo's 2005 report, Global Alliance Against Forced Labour, which makes a clear association between temporary migrant work in agriculture and forced labour in rural Asia. I argue that the representations of forced labour that emerge from the report risk, first, painting temporary migrants as victims, rather than as knowledgeable agents, and, second, residualising unfree labour relations, rather than shedding light on their connections to context-specific and contingent forms of capitalism and capital-state relations.

Author Keywords

[No Keywords available]

Index Keywords

labor migration Eurasia migrants experience capitalism labor relations globalization internal migration migrant worker Asia

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-53449100306&doi=10.1080%2f01436590802386674&partnerID=40&md5=9dadd3f015898540be6d05b8dff96c0d

DOI: 10.1080/01436590802386674
ISSN: 01436597
Cited by: 46
Original Language: English