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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Chihuahua’s missing labor movement : the role of emotions in maquiladora work

Márquez, Alejandro Márquez 29 April 2014 (has links)
The maquiladora industry was established in northern Mexico with the objective of providing employment opportunities to the growing population in the region. However, the terms of employment linked to the global economy limit the organizational capacity of workers to improve their working conditions. These terms shape an emotional habitus among maquiladora workers that prevents mobilization and reinforces a “hard-working” attitude predisposed to tolerate unsatisfactory labor relations concomitant with industrial deregulation. In my investigation, I analyze the emotional habitus of workers through cultural, productive, and political deregulation mechanisms employed in the sector. The cultural tool promotes a new labor philosophy focused on safeguarding employment sources in Mexico; production schemes individualize reward and punitive systems that are installed in constellations of local and international authoritative figures; and the political component prevents legitimate forms of organization through coopted labor unions. As a result, predispositions of workers to mobilize grievances in the maquiladora industry are unlikely. This report seeks to involve the social structures of emotions in discussions concerning political behavior and social movement literature. / text
2

Vnější ekonomické vztahy Mexika od začátku 90. let do současnosti

Umancová, Marta January 2007 (has links)
Diplomová práce se zabývá vybranými vnějšími ekonomickými vztahy Mexika od začátku 90. let do současnosti, zejména obecnou charakteristikou ekonomiky Mexika, dále zahraničním obchodem Mexika s jeho významnými obchodními partnery, přímými zahraničními investicemi, a také fenoménem mexického hospodářství - podniky typu maquiladora.
3

La viabilité du travail décent dans les zones franches du Nicaragua

Molina-Blandon, Yalina January 2007 (has links) (PDF)
Dans l'actuel contexte de la globalisation économique, les zones franches industrielles (ZFI) prennent de plus en plus d'importance dans la région de l'Amérique Centrale. Au Nicaragua, les ZFI sont apparues dans les années 90s et elles sont devenues, au niveau national, une source importante de travail dans le secteur formel de l'économie. Ce secteur absorbe une quantité considérable de la main d'oeuvre d'un pays ou près de 50% de la population vit dans la pauvreté, où le taux de chômage officiel est de 12% de la population économiquement active (PEA) et celui de sous-emploi est de 38.2%. Pour les travailleurs et particulièrement pour les femmes qui constituent 70% de la main d'oeuvre dans des ZFS, ces emplois sont la seule ou la meilleure option de travail disponible au Nicaragua. Malgré certains progrès récents, les restrictions à la liberté syndicale, les bas salaires, l'interdiction du droit de grève, les heures supplémentaires forcées sont monnaie courante dans les maquilas. De plus, le taux d'affiliation aux organisations syndicales dans les ZFS est très bas, non seulement à cause de la répression syndicale mais aussi en raison du niveau de politisation qui existe dans ces organisations. Les syndicats ne se sont pas encore adaptés au nouveau contexte économique du pays. Ils n'ont pas développé de nouvelles stratégies de lutte et de revendication des droits de travailleurs face à ce processus d'ouverture du marché. Et bien que la législation du travail au Nicaragua offre «sur papier» un haut degré de protection des droits des travailleurs, le système d'inspection au travail et l'intervention du Ministère sont faibles et peu efficaces en la matière. Le manque de ressources monétaires, mais aussi le manque de volonté politique d'appliquer ces normes et de veiller à ce que les entreprises les respectent expliquent largement l'écart entre le droit et la réalité. C'est dans ce contexte que le concept de travail décent peut jouer un rôle important dans l'amélioration des conditions de vie et de travail dans les ZFI. Ce concept s'inscrit dans la recherche générale d'une meilleure protection de la dignité humaine, de l'élimination de tout type de discrimination et de la promotion du développement humain. Cette recherche propose de jeter un regard juridique et social sur la situation des maquilas. Nous intégrons ici des éléments théoriques et pratiques à partir d'une analyse documentaire et d'une enquête de terrain que nous aidera à déterminer, à partir de la perception des travailleurs, des fonctionnaires publics, des acteurs économiques, des syndicats et d'autres organisations quels sont les problèmes rencontrés dans les ZFI pour faire face au déficit du travail décent au Nicaragua. Nous pourrons alors apprécier le niveau réel de réalisation du travail décent et également déterminer les défis encourus et la viabilité de ce concept en prenant en compte le niveau du développement, les conditions socio-économiques du pays et le rôle de l'État et des autres acteurs non étatiques. Finalement, nous souhaitons établir de nouvelles pistes de recherche sur l'application effective des normes et des programmes qui visent la protection et la réalisation effective des droits des travailleurs, et encore plus celui des travailleuses, dans un contexte d'égalité, de justice, de non discrimination et de protection sociale.
4

The recyclists : bikes, borders and basura

Melanson, Michael P., 1978- 05 August 2010 (has links)
In January, 2009, I joined Bikes Across Borders, a local grassroots organization, on their yearly bike caravan to Mexico. The group works to promote bicycles, both here and in Mexico, as an environmentally and financially sound alternative to motorized transportation. Each winter, members ride bicycles they build out of salvaged parts to border cities in Mexico. They give these bicycles to maquiladora workers who would otherwise spend a large portion of their income on transportation. These workers make a fraction of what they would in the U.S. and live in shacks amid the pollution from the factories they work in. This is the story of one group’s attempt at making a difference in the lives of these workers. / text
5

The Maghreb Maquiladora: Gender, Labor, and Socio-Economic Power in a Tunisian Export Processing Zone

Oueslati-Porter, Claire Therese 01 January 2011 (has links)
This study is about Tunisian women's work and lives in the present era of economic neoliberalism. The focus is women in the city of Bizerte, Tunisia, both those who work in Bizerte's export processing zone (EPZ), as well as those who work outside it. This study is a qualitative examination of formal and informal employment, set inside and outside of women's traditional political and economic domain, the home. Through ethnography of women's work and lives, this study's purpose is to contribute evidence against conflating women's "empowerment" with incorporation into global production. However, this study also lends itself to considerations of the possibilities for exertions of power, powers that women in Bizerte now seek that opened through the forces of globalization.
6

Strategies to Reduce Maquiladora Employee Absenteeism in Mexico

Cachazo, Antonio Jose 01 January 2018 (has links)
Employee absenteeism is a costly problem, affecting organizations' ability to deliver products and services. Finding strategies managers use to help reduce employee absenteeism is critical to sustain operational capacity, control labor costs, and to achieve organizational success. Drawing from the Herzberg 2-factors theory, the purpose of this qualitative case study was to explore strategies implemented by six business organizations to reduce employee absenteeism in the maquiladora industry in Mexico. Through semistructured interviews, 11 management participants shared strategies implemented to reduce absenteeism. In addition, other data sources, such as organizational policies, management graphs, and meeting minutes were used. Data were coded and analyzed revealing 7 themes: (a) organizational support, (b) leadership quality, (c) compensation and benefits, (d) disciplinary actions, (e) recognition, (f) work environment, and (g) staffing policies. The research findings may contribute to business practice by providing organizational managers broader perspectives for the development of strategies to effectively manage employee absenteeism. These findings might also contribute to social change by improving organizational communication, supporting workers' personal needs, recognizing employees' contributions, enhancing relationships with supervisors, improving the work environment, and raising employee take-home pay.
7

Measuring the Implementation of Employee Involvement in the Maquiladora Industry : A Matched-pairs Analysis of United States Parent Companies and Their Mexican Subsidiaries

Stanford, Jane Herring 12 1900 (has links)
Participative management practices between United States parent companies in the maquiladora industry and their Mexico assembly plants were investigated for this study. It was hypothesized that managers of parent maquiladora companies in the United States encouraged greater levels of worker participation than did expatriate managers in Mexican subsidiaries. However, the findings of this study indicate that expatriate managers in a number of the Mexico subsidiaries are currently implementing employee involvement approaches. In some instances, highly participative team-based approaches are being used.
8

Offshore Production, Labor Migration and the Macroeconomy

Zlate, Andrei January 2009 (has links)
Thesis advisor: Fabio Ghironi / In Chapter 1, I analyze the cross-country transmission of business cycles when firms relocate production abroad, at locations with lower labor costs. In the model, I distinguish between fluctuations in the number of offshoring firms (the extensive margin) and the value added per offshoring firm (the intensive margin) as separate transmission mechanisms. Firms are heterogeneous in labor productivity. They face a sunk entry cost at home and an additional fixed cost to produce offshore. The model replicates the extensive and intensive margin dynamics that I document for Mexico's maquiladora sector. Offshoring enhances the co-movement of output between the countries involved. Offshoring also reduces price dispersion across countries, because it dampens the real exchange rate appreciation that follows improvements in domestic productivity. In Chapter 2, I estimate the conditional correlations and impulse responses of three indicators of offshoring to Mexico (total value added, value added per plant, and the number of plants) for U.S. permanent technology shocks. Using data from U.S. manufacturing and Mexico's maquiladora sector, I identify U.S. permanent technology shocks in a structural VAR model with long-run restrictions. Following a positive shock, offshore production in Mexico exhibits an immediate increase along its intensive margin, but returns to its initial level over time. The extensive margin does not adjust on impact, but increases gradually towards a permanently higher level. The model of offshoring in Chapter 1 matches qualitatively the business cycle dynamics of offshoring to Mexico. In Chapter 3 (co-authored with Federico Mandelman), we analyze the dynamics of labor migration and the insurance role of remittances in a two-country, real business cycle framework. Emigration increases with the expected stream of future wage gains, and is dampened by the sunk cost reflecting border enforcement. During booms in the destination economy, the scarcity of established immigrants enhances the volatility of the immigrant wage and remittances. The welfare gain from the inflow of unskilled labor increases with the complementarity between skilled and unskilled labor, and with the share of the skilled among native labor. The model matches the cyclical dynamics of the unskilled immigration into the U.S. and remittances sent back to Mexico. / Thesis (PhD) — Boston College, 2009. / Submitted to: Boston College. Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. / Discipline: Economics.
9

“Globalization from below”? Uncovering the Nuances in Grassroots/Transnational Mobilization

Hettiarachchi, Cindy 07 February 2014 (has links)
This thesis offers a micro-level analysis of labour and women’s organizing in the context of globalization through the case study of the Comité Fronterizo de Obrer@s (CFO) from 1978 to 2009. We will see how one organization’s journey can give us insights into the complexities of local organizing and transnational networking in the context of globalization. This case study can be seen as a lens through which we can examine the changing context of labour and women’s organizing in the distinct maquiladora environment. My work positions itself in the “globalization from above” and “globalization from below” debate, specifically around the question of transnational social movements that form the “globalization from below” category in the context of a political economy analysis. However, where my thesis differs from a more traditional analysis of the resistance to globalization, such as that found in the global justice movements or alter-globalization movements, is in its focus on the complexities of organizing at the local level and the pressures that these local organizations feel from “above” from their transnational partners. What this thesis adds to the literature are the stories from the actual members of the organization, about the structure, the decision-making process of their organization, the role of the leadership and the connections between the local organizing and the transnational civil society partners. The complex history of an organization that has been there since the beginning of the maquiladora industry allows us a better understanding of the changing conditions and struggles these workers have faced. This journey through the history of the CFO, the richness of this empirical data encompassing more than 30 years of organizing in the maquiladora zone of Northern Mexico also allows us to explore “globalization from below” through different lens. This thesis brings in a micro-detail analysis of a specific organization in a specific context where we can see clearly transnational civil society linkages and the impact of globalizing capitalist neoliberal economy. As such, this research can offer us new insights into the intricacies of local-global linkages and thus contribute to an area often neglected or underdeveloped in international relations (IR).
10

“Globalization from below”? Uncovering the Nuances in Grassroots/Transnational Mobilization

Hettiarachchi, Cindy January 2014 (has links)
This thesis offers a micro-level analysis of labour and women’s organizing in the context of globalization through the case study of the Comité Fronterizo de Obrer@s (CFO) from 1978 to 2009. We will see how one organization’s journey can give us insights into the complexities of local organizing and transnational networking in the context of globalization. This case study can be seen as a lens through which we can examine the changing context of labour and women’s organizing in the distinct maquiladora environment. My work positions itself in the “globalization from above” and “globalization from below” debate, specifically around the question of transnational social movements that form the “globalization from below” category in the context of a political economy analysis. However, where my thesis differs from a more traditional analysis of the resistance to globalization, such as that found in the global justice movements or alter-globalization movements, is in its focus on the complexities of organizing at the local level and the pressures that these local organizations feel from “above” from their transnational partners. What this thesis adds to the literature are the stories from the actual members of the organization, about the structure, the decision-making process of their organization, the role of the leadership and the connections between the local organizing and the transnational civil society partners. The complex history of an organization that has been there since the beginning of the maquiladora industry allows us a better understanding of the changing conditions and struggles these workers have faced. This journey through the history of the CFO, the richness of this empirical data encompassing more than 30 years of organizing in the maquiladora zone of Northern Mexico also allows us to explore “globalization from below” through different lens. This thesis brings in a micro-detail analysis of a specific organization in a specific context where we can see clearly transnational civil society linkages and the impact of globalizing capitalist neoliberal economy. As such, this research can offer us new insights into the intricacies of local-global linkages and thus contribute to an area often neglected or underdeveloped in international relations (IR).

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