SOCIAL PARTNERS FOR SOCIAL UPGRADING? ON CORPORATE STRATEGIES IN ARGENTINIAN AGRO-INDUSTRIAL VALUE CHAINS

被引:1
|
作者
Bernhold, Christin [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Hamburg, Fak Math Informat & Nat Wissensch, Inst Geog, Bundesstr 55, D-20156 Hamburg, Germany
来源
MITTEILUNGEN DER OSTERREICHISCHEN GEOGRAPHISCHEN GESELLSCHAFT | 2021年 / 163卷
关键词
Global Value Chains; Social Upgrading; Argentinian Agribusiness; Corporate Strategies; Class Relations; Argentina; GLOBAL PRODUCTION NETWORKS; GLOBALIZATION; ECONOMY;
D O I
10.1553/moegg163s235
中图分类号
P9 [自然地理学]; K9 [地理];
学科分类号
0705 ; 070501 ;
摘要
While global value chain (GVC) studies originated with a critical analysis of the global political economy, today's mainstream GVC research has sidelined issues of exploitation and instead focuses on upgrading as a development strategy. This is often accompanied by the implicit assumption that upgrading translates into more and better jobs. Responding to critiques of this assumption, GVC scholars have highlighted the need for an additional social upgrading agenda. However, this paper calls into question this agenda's often unreserved invocation of public-private-civil society partnerships to achieve social gains for more than just firms. It argues that there is a need to pay greater attention to capitalist social relations and how actual corporate strategies contradict workers' interests. Taking GVC upgrading strategies in agro-industrial value chains in Argentina as an example, the paper looks at the stance that corporate actors take on social upgrading. It shows that the labour conditions and salaries vary in different chain links and that organised workers in processing industries have achieved improvements in labour struggles. Corporate actors, on the other hand, do not consider themselves responsible for social upgrading beyond their role in economic growth, which then allegedly results in job creation. In fact, they rather portray trade unions as barriers to capital-led agribusiness development. The paper concludes by advocating for a value chain approach that analyses questions of indecent labour as existing in-relation-to-capital, making antagonistic interests visible.
引用
收藏
页码:235 / 264
页数:30
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Social inequalities in global value chains: an intersectional perspective on social reproduction
    Sproll, Martina
    OSTERREICHISCHE ZEITSCHRIFT FUER SOZIOLOGIE, 2020, 45 (04): : 385 - 401
  • [22] Social upgrading in developing country industrial clusters: A reflection on the literature
    Pyke, Frank
    Lund-Thomsen, Peter
    COMPETITION & CHANGE, 2016, 20 (01) : 53 - 68
  • [23] Human Rights and Corporate Social Responsibility in Developing Countries' Industrial Clusters
    Giuliani, Elisa
    JOURNAL OF BUSINESS ETHICS, 2016, 133 (01) : 39 - 54
  • [24] Global value chains and supplier perceptions of corporate social responsibility: a case study of garment manufacturers in Myanmar
    Bae, Jinsun
    Lund-Thomsen, Peter
    Lindgreen, Adam
    GLOBAL NETWORKS-A JOURNAL OF TRANSNATIONAL AFFAIRS, 2021, 21 (04): : 653 - 680
  • [25] Exploring Political Corporate Social Responsibility in Global Supply Chains
    Julia Patrizia Rotter
    Peppi-Emilia Airike
    Cecilia Mark-Herbert
    Journal of Business Ethics, 2014, 125 : 581 - 599
  • [26] Exploring Political Corporate Social Responsibility in Global Supply Chains
    Rotter, Julia Patrizia
    Airike, Peppi-Emilia
    Mark-Herbert, Cecilia
    JOURNAL OF BUSINESS ETHICS, 2014, 125 (04) : 581 - 599
  • [27] Multichain strategies and economic upgrading in global value chains: Evidence from Kenyan horticulture
    Pasquali, Giovanni
    Krishnan, Aarti
    Alford, Matthew
    WORLD DEVELOPMENT, 2021, 146
  • [28] Social entrepreneurship and global value chains: A literature review
    Jimenez Barrera, Yasmani
    EQUIDAD & DESARROLLO, 2018, (32) : 227 - 246
  • [29] Corporate Social Responsibility along the global value chain
    Herkenhoff, Philipp
    Krautheim, Sebastian
    Semrau, Finn Ole
    Steglich, Frauke
    JOURNAL OF DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS, 2024, 167
  • [30] Global value chains and carbon emission reduction in developing countries: Does industrial upgrading matter?
    Wang, Shuhong
    Wang, Xiaoqing
    Chen, Suisui
    ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT ASSESSMENT REVIEW, 2022, 97