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Accumulation in Post-Colonial Capitalism

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The article was published on 2017-01-01. It has received 16 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Capitalism.

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Capital, State, Empire: The New American Way of Digital Warfare

TL;DR: In this paper, the United States presents the greatest source of global geo-political violence and instability, and the USA's historical impulse to weaponize communication technologies has been analyzed and analyzed.
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Compliance Codes and Women Workers’ (Mis)representation and (Non)recognition in the Apparel Industry of Bangladesh

TL;DR: In this paper, women workers in Bangladeshi garment factories are misrecognised and not represented in the apparel industry through focussing on two enacted collective compliance measure agreements adopted by global brands to improve safety and working conditions.
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Super-exploitation of Adivasi Migrant Workers: The Political Economy of Migration from Southern Rajasthan to Gujarat:

TL;DR: In this paper, a political economy account of labour migration of Adivasi workers from southern Rajasthan to growth centres in Gujarat is presented, unpacking the structural forces that shape this labour migration.
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Portraits of Women’s Paid Domestic-Care Labour: Ethnographic Studies from Globalizing India

TL;DR: In this article, the authors draw out themes from all four articles which focus on India's domestic-care economy: women's paid domestic labour, care work and surrogacy through fine-grained fine grained tools.
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Examining the 'Labour' in Labour Migration: Migrant Workers' Informal Work Arrangements and Access to Labour Rights in Urban Sectors.

TL;DR: The article uses pre- and post-Covid evidence on labour rights violations facing migrant workers in three modern, urban work sectors—construction, hotels and manufacturing—spanning the high in-migration cities of Ahmedabad and Surat in Gujarat to highlight that suspension of migrant workers’ rights is the central feature of urban economic growth, maintained through extra-legal and informal processes in its labour markets.