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Labor rights and multinational production

Part of the Cambridge Studies in Comparative Politics series
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Labor Rights and Multinational Production investigates the relationship between workers' rights and multinational production.

Mosley argues that some types of multinational production, embodied in directly owned foreign investment, positively affect labor rights.

But other types of international production, particularly subcontracting, can engender competitive races to the bottom in labor rights.

To test these claims, Mosley presents newly generated measures of collective labor rights, covering a wide range of low- and middle-income nations for the 1985-2002 period.

Labor Rights and Multinational Production suggests that the consequences of economic openness for developing countries are highly dependent on foreign firms' modes of entry and, more generally, on the precise way in which each developing country engages the global economy.

The book contributes to academic literature in comparative and international political economy, and to public policy debates regarding the effects of globalization.

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Product Details
Cambridge University Press
1107218764 / 9781107218765
eBook (Adobe Pdf)
331.011
01/11/2010
England
English
285 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%
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