This article discusses some alternative or critical theoretical contributions regarding globalization
and labor. The main question in this discussion is if there are changes in direction of a possible
revitalization of labor movements and if international solidarity can increase due to globalization.
This question also relates to discussions of changes in division of work, the concept of work, working
class, commodification, decommodification, and new centers of global production?all related
to different paradigms or new concepts. The reason or need for reconceptualizing comes from the
great transformation of capitalism in forms of neoliberal globalization, in a different direction than
predicted by Polanyi. That is, instead of increased public sector decommodification (not profit- or
market-oriented production) and national regulation, embedding capitalist markets, as seen after
1945, the last three decades have witnessed a countertransformation and large-scale recommodification
by privatizing, disembedding, and deregulating global markets. As a consequence, inequality
in income and working life conditions has increased in most countries and been used to press
trade unions. Western industrial unions have been declining as many industries and labor-intensive,
low-paid jobs moved to developing countries. Most blue-collar jobs are now in Asia, especially
China, with about one-third of its employment blue collars. Is the center of global capital-labor
contradictions and dynamics moving to the South, with a possibility of a new revitalization of labor
and international solidarity? We discuss different optimistic and pessimistic views on a possible
international revitalization of labor.
Author Biographies
Daniel Fleming, Department of Society and Globalisation, International Development Studies, Roskilde University
Emeritus Associate Professor
Henrik S?borg, Department of Society and Globalisation, International Development Studies, Roskilde University