Record Display for the EPA National Library Catalog

RECORD NUMBER: 4 OF 7

Main Title Labor in a Globalizing City Economic Restructuring in São Paulo, Brazil / [electronic resource] :
Type EBOOK
Author Buechler, Simone Judith.
Publisher Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Springer,
Year Published 2014
Call Number HF1021-1027
ISBN 9783319016610
Subjects Geography ; Labor economics ; Microeconomics
Internet Access
Description Access URL
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-01661-0
Collation XIV, 340 p. 32 illus. in color. online resource.
Notes
Due to license restrictions, this resource is available to EPA employees and authorized contractors only
Contents Notes
Introduction -- The Spectrum of Voices in the São Paulo Economy -- Six Industrial Case Studies: Internal and External Flexibilization and Technological Change -- The History, Politics, and Economies of Three Communities and their Inhabitants -- Outsourcing Production and Commerce: A Close Examination of Unregistered Salaried Workers, Sweatshop Workers, Homeworkers and Ambulant Vendors for Firms -- The Increasingly Precarious Nature of Self-Employment -- "Destiny is not set in stone": Social Actors, Cooperatives, and Local Coalition-Building -- Conclusion. The extraordinary stories of low-income women living in São Paulo, industrial case studies and the details of three squatter settlements, and communities in the periphery researched in Simone Buechler's book, Labor in a Globalizing City, allow us to better understand the period of economic transformation in São Paulo from 1996 to 2003. Buechler's in-depth ethnographic research over a period of 17 years include interviews with a variety of social actors ranging from favela inhabitants to Wall Street bankers. Buechler examines the paradox of a globalizing city with highly developed financial, service, and industrial sectors, but at the same time a growing sector of microenterprises, degraded labor, considerable unemployment, unprecedented inequality, and precarious infrastructure in its low-income communities. The author argues that informalization and low-income women's labor are an integral part of the global economy. Other countries are continuing to use the same kind of neo-liberal economic model even though once again with the latest global financial crisis, it has proven to be detrimental to many workers.