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Labor Rights, Associate Duties, and Transnational Production Chains

File(s)
5_1_13_Labor_Rights.pdf (3.19 MB)
Permanent Link(s)
https://hdl.handle.net/1813/72979
Collections
Cornell HR Review
Author
Milman-Sivan, Faina
Lerner, Hanna
Dahan, Yossi
Abstract

[Excerpt] In this article we propose to contribute to the philosophical debate on global justice by viewing labor relations as a type of association which implies moral commitments among its participants. We argue that such a view of associative duties justifies a cosmopolitan approach to labor standards, calling for the regulation and enforcement of labor rights beyond the limited borders of the nation-state. Since the 1980s, the debate on global justice has by and large focused on the question of whether the principles of justice should be extended beyond the political boundaries of a sovereign nation-state.[1] Current theories of global justice rely heavily upon abstract normative arguments in support of either cosmopolitan or anti-cosmopolitan approaches and tend to avoid concrete analysis of practical problems stemming from increasing global economic, political, environmental, or legal developments. [2] The field of labor has been either neglected or marginalized in this debate.[3] In this article, we propose to overcome the disciplinary gap between the empirical reality of global labor and the normative discussion of global justice by drawing on a theoretical analysis of associative duties as well as the empirical study of transnational corporations (TNCs) production practices.

Date Issued
2013-05-01
Keywords
HR Review
•
Human Resources
•
labor rights
•
duties
•
transnational production chains
Rights
Required Publisher Statement: © Cornell HR Review. This article is reproduced here by special permission from the publisher.
Type
article

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