** Apologies for cross-postings ** Annual Meetings of the American Association of Geographers 3-7 April 2019, Washington DC
Call for papers Labour Regimes and Global Systems of Production and Reproduction Organisers: Liam Campling, School of Business and Management, Queen Mary University of London Adrian Smith, School of Geography, Queen Mary University of London Recent years have seen a resurgence of interest in the question of labour in critical human geography. In economic and development geography this has partly taken the form of a concern to understand the role that labour regimes play in the structuring, organisation and dynamics of globalised systems of production and reproduction. Labour regimes are seen as historically formed, multi-scalar phenomena resulting from the articulation of struggles over local social relations, often intersecting (directly or indirectly) with the commercial demands of lead-firms in globalised production networks, and with the gendered and racialized politics of social reproduction. Drawing inspiration from a long-standing debate in development studies, political sociology and feminist political economy, the focus on labour regimes has enabled a re-invigoration of the "labour geography" framework which emerged in the 1990s. This set of sessions develops further this emerging field of intellectual enquiry by examining the nature, role, constitution and dynamics of and in labour regimes in globalising capitalism. In particular the papers in the sessions will aim to examine the ways in which the conjunctural and contingent formation of labour regimes in place matter for the organisation of global systems of production and reproduction. We welcome abstracts for papers engaging with this emerging terrain, which might examine any of the following areas through both conceptual and empirical (or ideally combined) research, although this list is by no means exclusive: * Theorising labour regimes and global production networks * Labour regimes, work and social reproduction: the gendering of labour regimes in the world economy * Processes of racialisation and racial oppression in labour regimes * Scaling labour regimes: understanding the articulation of workplace, firm, local and national labour regimes * The state and labour regimes: contrasting political economies of national and local labour regimes * The regulation and governance of labour regimes in the world economy (labour provisions in trade policy and public procurement regulation; corporate social responsibility, codes of conduct and other forms of private ordering of labour, etc) * Historical transformations of labour regimes * Logistics and labour regimes in contemporary capitalism * Resource extraction and/or agrarian labour regimes: what difference does 'nature' make? * Labour regimes in sites of industrial production * Labour regimes and the intangible industries Please submit abstracts (250 words maximum) to Adrian Smith (a.m.sm...@qmul.ac.uk<mailto:a.m.sm...@qmul.ac.uk>) and Liam Campling (l.campl...@qmul.ac.uk<mailto:l.campl...@qmul.ac.uk>) by Monday October 8, 2018. Abstract authors will be notified by Monday October 15, 2018 and those accepted must complete the abstract submission and conference registration process with the AAG before October 25, 2018. Adrian Smith | Professor of Human Geography & Dean for Research (Humanities & Social Sciences) | School of Geography | Queen Mary University of London | London E1 4NS | United Kingdom | t: 020 7882 8436 | e: a.m.sm...@qmul.ac.uk<mailto:a.m.sm...@qmul.ac.uk>