Publication
Title
Superfluous jobs in extractive industries : the usefulness/uselessness of job creation after dispossession
Author
Abstract
Job creation has become central to the global development agenda. Extractive industries in particular highlight employment opportunities for the host communities in which they operate through direct, indirect and induced jobs. Exploring literature on surplus populations/dispossession and distributive politics/Corporate Social Responsibility and using evidence from the Democratic Republic of Congo, we scrutinize the idea of job creation in the extractive industries as a development strategy. We argue that (1) superfluous jobs are being created to keep people alive yet silent in the wake of dispossession; and that (2) while they may help certain people to ‘stay alive’, these jobs also produce new inequalities and further marginalization.
Language
English
Source (journal)
Work, employment and society / British Sociological Association [Belmont] - London, 1987, currens
Publication
London : 2023
ISSN
0950-0170 [print]
1469-8722 [online]
DOI
10.1177/09500170211008721
Volume/pages
37 :2 (2023) , p. 394-411
ISI
000649520700001
Full text (Publisher's DOI)
Full text (open access)
Full text (publisher's version - intranet only)
UAntwerpen
Faculty/Department
Research group
Project info
Towards a new theoretical framework for linkages from large-scale mining: bringing in power and the production of access and exclusion.
InforMining? An in-depth study of informalization processes in global gold production.
Publication type
Subject
Affiliation
Publications with a UAntwerp address
External links
Web of Science
Record
Identifier
Creation 09.05.2021
Last edited 02.10.2024
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