CFP: “Constructing Workers”

by E Wayne Ross on September 28, 2005

CALL FOR PAPERS

Special Issue of QUALITATIVE SOCIOLOGY on “Constructing Workers”

“Constructing Workers”: A special issue focused on efforts to organize workers in contingent labor contracts who are often not considered employees. Increasing numbers of workers fit this description, and both unions and community organizations have sought, in various efforts, to help
them organize for rights and benefits due workers with employee status. How do these groups organize? With what models? With what resources? How do they construct “workers” in such a way as to make contingent workers and contingent work less contingent? How do workers see themselves and their work? We would be interested in articles dealing with any of the following topics, or other related ones.

    * migrant and day labor

    * domestic worker organizing

    * sex worker organizing

    * workfare organizing

    * sweatshop organizing

    * worker centers

    * unemployed workers

    * retail worker organizing

    * organizing in industries that have become or are becoming more contingent

    * transnational labor identities (i.e., transposition of labor politics from
    home to host countries by immigrant laborers)

    * gender, race, ethnicity, and their intersections with organizing appeals

    * the negotiation of union-community relations

    * contingent workers’ encounters with the state


Deadline: JANUARY 10, 2006
Manuscript submission guidelines available at: WWW.SPRINGERONLINE.COM

Send papers to:

John Krinsky, GUEST EDITOR
Department of Political Science, NAC 4/126
City College, City University of New York
Convent Avenue at 138th Street
New York, NY 10031
jkrinsky@ccny.cuny.edu
212 650-5236