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Faltering Standardization: Conflict and Labour Relations in China's Taxi and Sanitation Industries

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Abstract

The marketization of municipal services in China's cities from the 1990s triggered a wave of strikes beginning in the 2000s that provided an impetus towards standardization and the re-regulation of employment conditions. On the basis of a study of the sanitation and taxi industries in the cities of Wenzhou and Guangzhou, the authors find that local governments have utilized three strategies in promoting standardization: unionization, public policy implementation and business consolidation. Although outcomes vary across the cases considered, institutionalization remains weak at best and conflicts persist. The article concludes by presenting a schema for comparing the different strategies identified in these cases and those historically institutionalized in the West.

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Date Issued

2021-09

Publisher

Wiley & Sons

Keywords

labour relations; collective bargaining; standardization; service sector; working conditions; China

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Previously Published As

Zhang, H., & Friedman, E. (2021). Faltering standardization: Conflict and labour relations in China's taxi and sanitation industries. International Labour Review, 160(3), pp. 363-385.

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Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International

Types

article

Accessibility Feature

high contract display; reading order; structural navigation; tagged PDF

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none

Accessibility Summary

Accessible pdf

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