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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Annie Delaney , Rosaria Burchielli , Shelley Marshall , Jane TatePublisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Greenleaf Publishing Weight: 0.300kg ISBN: 9781783535323ISBN 10: 1783535326 Pages: 186 Publication Date: 22 November 2018 Audience: College/higher education , Tertiary & Higher Education Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsIntroduction: Homework and Gender justice Chapter 1: Understanding Homework and Homeworkers Chapter 2: The Invisibilisation of Homework Chapter 3: Extension of labour regulation to homeworkers Chapter 4: Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR): Improving Homeworkers Recognition? Chapter 5: The Logic of the Supply Chain: Barriers and Strategies for Homeworker Representation Chapter 6: Homeworkers Organising: Transnational to Local Chapter 7: Making Change: A Gender Justice FrameworkReviewsThe injustices experienced by women homeworkers across the globe are shockingly familiar, systemic and exploitative. Importantly this book analyses the problem and takes us to the powerful change that is possible through homeworkers collectively organising. Michele O'Neil President of Australian Council of Trade Unions This is a very important and timely book, drawing together the authors' collective experience of research and activism on homeworkers. It highlights the lack of recognition or rights of homeworkers' despite their important commercial contribution, and argues forcefully for gender justice. A must read for anyone interested in homeworkers. Stephanie Barientos, Professor of Global Development University of Manchester, a.barrientos@manchester.ac.uk Attentive to patriarchy and capitalism, informal economies and global supply chains, and the material and ideological components of neoliberalism, these activist scholars wield a robust gender justice framework to expose the harms of exploitative homework. Delaney, Burchielli, Marshall, and Tate unmask the making of invisibility and uncover the lives and labors of women whose dwellings have turned into workplaces. But they do more: in analyzing strategies that have worked and those which have not, they offer roadmaps to achieving rights, recognition, redistribution, and a larger social justice. Eileen Boris, Hull Professor and Distinguished Professor of Feminist Studies, University of California, Santa Barbara Author InformationAnnie Delaney is Senior Lecturer, School of Management, College of Business, RMIT University Melbourne, Australia. Rosaria Burchielli is Associate Professor (Honorary), Department of Management, La Trobe University, Australia. Shelley Marshall is Vice Chancellor’s Senior Research Fellow, RMIT University, Australia. Jane Tate worked as Coordinator of Homeworkers Worldwide, Leeds, UK, until September 2018. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |