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Workers' Views on Plant Closures: The Global Context of Production.

Source :
Conference Papers - American Sociological Association; 2016, p1-19, 19p
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

In December 2013, during the yearly holiday slowdown, workers at a food processing plant in London, Ontario were called in to attend a special meeting with management where they learned that the plant would close in 2014. Although the news was shocking to most, some workers had predicted the eventual closure of the plant. The south western region of the province had been hit by numerous closures in both heavy and light manufacturing, including food processing and brewing, despite access to major transportation routes, to the Canada-U.S. border and to a limitless number of trained workers who readily embraced opportunities to work in production and live the "working-class dream"--marked by decent wages, relatively secure (unionized) employment, benefits and a modest pension. This paper examines the workers' views on their plant's closure within the context of global production and the ways in which they construct a "discourse of deindustrialization." We conclude that while workers may be involved in the minutia of the production process, many are attentive to the global context of their jobs, keeping a keen eye on domestic and international market forces and structural conditions that may affect their job security. While most workers are unable to emphatically discuss the ways in which processes of globalization have contributed to the plant closure and ultimately their futures as production workers, they mainly discuss one or more causal factors for their factory's demise but do not develop a systematic understanding of economic globalization and corporate restructuring. Despite individual and collective attempts to buffer the harsh realities of market forces, most understand and accept their powerlessness and reluctantly see themselves as one paycheque away from an endless cycle of joblessness and a lifetime of insecurity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Conference Papers - American Sociological Association
Publication Type :
Conference
Accession number :
121201919