Historical Perspectives on Precarious Work: The Cases of Egypt and India under British Imperialism

Authors

  • Peter H. Bent University of Massachusetts, Amherst

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15173/glj.v8i1.2716

Abstract

The concept of precarious work is used by social scientists to describe work that is “uncertain, unpredictable, and risky from the point of view of the worker” (Kalleberg, 2009: 2). This paper argues that such work can take a variety of forms, beyond those seen in the transition from the stable post-WWII era to the neo-liberal era in the West. Egypt and India offer instructive case studies. Industrialisation (or lack thereof) in Egypt and India has been thoroughly documented by others. The purpose of this paper is to argue that these developments can be seen as the emergence of precarious, industrial working arrangements. This framework is useful for demonstrating that precarious work has come along with industrial development in a range of countries during different time periods. In this light, the stable employment arrangements characteristic of the post-war West were an anomaly. The global economic and social history of industrialisation is characterised by precarious working arrangements, as seen in colonial-era Egypt and India.

Author Biography

Peter H. Bent, University of Massachusetts, Amherst

Peter Bent is a PhD student in Economics at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. His dissertation studies the interactions between governments and markets during financial crises at the turn of the twentieth century. [Email: pbent@umass.edu]


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Published

2017-01-31

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ARTICLES