Results for ' forced labour'

980 found
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  1.  17
    13 Gender, Ethnicity and Familial Ideology in Georgetown, Guyana.Female Labour Force & Participation Reconsidered - 2002 - In Patricia Mohammed (ed.), Gendered realities: essays in Caribbean feminist thought. Mona, Jamaica: Centre for Gender and Development Studies.
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  2. Abortion, Forced Labor, and War.Laura Purdy - 1996 - In Laura Martha Purdy (ed.), Reproducing Persons: Issues in Feminist Bioethics. Cornell University Press.
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  3.  15
    Forced labour in supply chains: Rolling back the debate on gender, migration and sexual commerce.Rutvica Andrijasevic - 2021 - European Journal of Women's Studies 28 (4):410-424.
    This article makes a conceptual contribution to the broader literature on unfree labour by challenging the separate treatment of sexual and industrial labour exploitation both by researchers and in law and policy. This article argues that the prevailing focus of the supply chain literature on industrial labour has inadvertently posited sexual labour as the ‘other’ of industrial labour thus obfuscating how the legal blurring of boundaries between industrial and service labour is engendering new modalities (...)
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  4.  68
    Taxation, Forced Labor, and Theft: Why Taxation is “On a Par” with Forced Labor.Adam D. Moore - 2020 - Southern Journal of Philosophy 59 (3):362-385.
    The Southern Journal of Philosophy, Volume 59, Issue 3, Page 362-385, September 2021.
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  5.  64
    Is taxation forced labour?Timothy Hinton - 2019 - Think 18 (51):11-23.
    Libertarians frequently complain that when a government taxes some of its citizens in order to help others, it is forcing them to behave altruistically. And obviously, we are meant to think, that use of force is morally objectionable. But what exactly makes taxation objectionable? One answer that many libertarians supply is that forcing some people to benefit others is wrong because it involves forced labour. The underlying thought seems to be that there is something morally troubling about making (...)
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  6. Life Interrupted: Trafficking into Forced Labor in the United States.[author unknown] - 2014
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  7.  21
    Nozick's Taxation is Forced Labor Argument.Jason Waller - 2011 - In Michael Bruce & Steven Barbone (eds.), Just the Arguments. Chichester, West Sussex, U.K.: Wiley‐Blackwell. pp. 242–243.
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  8.  19
    From Frankfurt to Westermann: Forced Labor and the Early Development of Finley’s Thought.Jonathan S. Perry - 2014 - American Journal of Philology 135 (2):221-241.
    Finley’s conceptualization of Greco-Roman slavery was developing in the late 1930s, between W. L. Westermann’s traditional notions and the revolutionary ideas advanced by his contacts in the Frankfurt School in Exile. Turning points came in 1936, when he reviewed Westermann’s Realencyclopädie article on slavery, and in 1937, when he was hired to assist Otto Kirchheimer in the production of a monograph on penal history and reform. The resulting book, Punishment and Social Structure, became a classic text of modern criminology, but (...)
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  9. Nozick's taxation is forced labor argument.Jason Waller - 2011 - In Michael Bruce & Steven Barbone (eds.), Just the Arguments: 100 of the Most Important Arguments in Western Philosophy. Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell.
     
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  10.  48
    Power, labour power and productive force in Foucault’s reading of Capital.Alex J. Feldman - 2019 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 45 (3):307-333.
    This article uses Foucault’s lecture courses to illuminate his reading of Marx’s Capital in Discipline and Punish. Foucault finds in Marx’s account of cooperation a precedent for his own approach to power. In turn, Foucault helps us rethink the concepts of productive force and labour power in Marx. Foucault is shown to be particularly interested in one of Marx’s major themes in Capital, parts III–IV: the subsumption of labour under capital. In Discipline and Punish and The Punitive Society, (...)
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  11.  23
    The Korean Supreme Court’s Judgments on the Case Involving Forced Labor Mobilization: Historical Injustice and Rectificatory Justice.Doo-Hyun Kong - 2019 - Korean Journal of Legal Philosophy 22 (1):313-380.
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  12. Part II. The Dilemmas of Animal Labour. Animal labour: toward a prohibition of forced labour and a right to freely choose one's work.Charlotte E. Blattner - 2019 - In Charlotte E. Blattner, Kendra Coulter & Will Kymlicka (eds.), Animal Labour: A New Frontier of Interspecies Justice? Oxford: Oxford University Press.
     
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  13.  25
    Labour Force Participation and Employment of Humanitarian Migrants: Evidence from the Building a New Life in Australia Longitudinal Data.Zhiming Cheng, Ben Zhe Wang & Lucy Taksa - 2019 - Journal of Business Ethics 168 (4):697-720.
    This study uses the longitudinal data from the Building a New Life in Australia survey to examine the relationships between human capital and labour market participation and employment status among recently arrived/approved humanitarian migrants. We find that the likelihood of participating in the labour force is higher for those who had pre-immigration paid job experience, completed study/job training and have better job searching knowledge/skills in Australia and possess higher proficiency in spoken English. We find that the chance of (...)
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  14.  22
    Book Review: Marriage Trafficking: Women in Forced Wedlock by Kaye Quek Revisiting the Law and Governance of Trafficking, Forced Labor and Modern Slavery by Prabha Kotiswaran. [REVIEW]Sreya Banerjea - 2020 - Feminist Review 126 (1):202-205.
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  15.  10
    Labor-force reentry among U.s. Homemakers in midlife:: A life-course analysis.Niall Bolger, Geraldine Downey & Phyllis Moen - 1990 - Gender and Society 4 (2):230-243.
    Guided by a life-course perspective, this article uses data from 11 waves of the Michigan Panel Study of Income Dynamics to examine the influence of human capital, family structure, and local labor-market demand variables on the reentry into the labor force of midlife homemakers in the United States in the 1970s. By looking at two contiguous time periods, the first and last halves of the 1970s, it investigates how the influence of these factors varied with social changes in the job-opportunity (...)
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  16.  26
    Visible Labour? Productive Forces and Imaginaries of Participation in European Insect Studies, ca. 1680–1810.Dominik Hünniger - 2021 - Berichte Zur Wissenschaftsgeschichte 44 (2):180-210.
    The practice of early modern natural history depended on the collective collecting activities of a great variety of people. Among them, artisans played a major role in acquiring and distributing knowledge about the natural world and they contributed significantly to the scholarly labour in natural history. This distributed labour was both acknowledged by contemporaries as well as hidden from sight, reflecting the period′s dominant norms for class and gender. By combining an interpretation of the visual representation of (...) in European insect studies with an examination of written sources about natural history practices from about 1680 to 1810, this article decodes the often‐codified frontispieces and other more symbolic illustrations to offer new insights into the labour of natural history. Those who identified as scholars and artisans (or both) conceptualised their own intellectual and practical engagement with natural history within the semantic field of work. Some seemed to have even envisioned a new social role for academics as well as artisans. This article analyses the diversity of the “productive forces” in insect studies as they changed over time and it reconstructs what I will call the social imaginaries of participation. (shrink)
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  17.  51
    Moral Forces in Dealing with the Labor Question.William M. Salter - 1895 - International Journal of Ethics 5 (3):296-308.
  18.  10
    Issues of private international law and civil procedure arising out of the U.s. Civil suits for forced labor duringworld war II: To what extent do U.s. Conflict and procedural rules obstruct private liability for wartime human rights violations? [REVIEW]Paul Volken & Petar Sarcevic - 2009 - In Paul Volken & Petar Sarcevic (eds.), Yearbook of Private International Law: Volume Iii. Sellier de Gruyter.
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  19.  6
    Book Review: Life Interrupted: Trafficking into Forced Labor in the United States by Denise Brennan. [REVIEW]Edward Snajdr - 2015 - Gender and Society 29 (5):745-747.
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  20.  18
    Moral Forces in Dealing with the Labor Question.William M. Salter - 1894 - International Journal of Ethics 5 (3):296.
  21.  87
    Human Labour and Unity of Force.Sergei Podolinsky - 2008 - Historical Materialism 16 (1):163-183.
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  22. Are workers forced to sell their labor power?G. A. Cohen - 1985 - Philosophy and Public Affairs 14 (1):99-105.
  23.  45
    Korean womens labor force participation: attitude and behavior.Minja Kim Choe, Sae-Kwon Kong, Karen Oppenhelm Mason, F. J. Sichona, U. C. Isiugo-Abanihe, J. A. Ebigbola, A. A. Adewuyi, K. K. Singh, C. M. Suchindran & V. Singh - 1993 - Journal of Biosocial Science 25 (4):473-82.
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  24.  37
    Retaining a mexican labor force.Leticia Peña - 2000 - Journal of Business Ethics 26 (2):123 - 131.
    This paper sets forth the findings of a research study undertaken in Chihuahua, Mexico. The length of stay of 1 866 employees in six maquiladora plants is analyzed across a maximum of 24 months. By drawing on discrete time hazard modeling, the research analyzes the extent to which work and nonwork factors contributed to employee length of stay in the late 1980s. It examines, in particular, the influence of position, cohort grouping, plant type, and demographic characteristics on employee duration in (...)
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  25.  40
    The Structural Injustice of Forced Migration and the Failings of Normative Theory.David Ingram - unknown
    I propose to criticize two strands of argument - contractarian and utilitarian – that liberals have put forth in defense of economic coercion, based on the notion of justifiable paternalism. To illustrate my argument, I appeal to the example of forced labor migration, driven by the exigencies of market forces. In particular, I argue that the forced migration of a special subset of unemployed workers lacking other means of subsistence cannot be redeemed paternalistically as freedom or welfare enhancing (...)
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  26.  5
    Choosing everything: Bataille’s perishable moments of sainthood.Konstantinos Kerasovitis Independent, Hermoupolis, Greecekonstantinos Kerasovitis Wrote His Doctoral Thesis on Georges Bataille, Digital Labourhis Research Interests Are Human Centric, Stretch From the Philosophy of Technology to Theology He Comes, A. Background In Design & is Currently Employed in the Greek Ministry Of Labour - forthcoming - Journal for Cultural Research:1-15.
    To be human is to be autonomous, yet this is a trait that most of us lack. We are subject to forces external to our being. We are workers; we are citizens; we are needful creatures. Humanity-proper in these times of neoliberal omnipotence is defined differently. The key terms are familiar: personal betterment, personal responsibility, productivity, pleasantness. A forked tongue slithers in our conscience, tells us that these are the traits of the human condition. Through Bataille, this paper argues the (...)
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  27. Stakeholder Forces of Socially Responsible Supply Chain Management Orientation.Haesun Park-Poaps & Kathleen Rees - 2010 - Journal of Business Ethics 92 (2):305-322.
    This project investigates salient stakeholder forces of socially responsible supply chain orientation (SRSCO) in the apparel and footwear sector focusing on fair labor management issues. SRSCO was conceptualized as a composite of internal organizational direction and external partnership for a creation and continuation of fair labor conditions throughout the supply chain. Primary stakeholders identified were consumers, regulation, industry, and media. A total of 209 mail survey responses from sourcing managers of U.S. apparel and footwear companies were analyzed. Two dimensions of (...)
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  28.  12
    The effect of economic restructuring on puerto Rican women's labor force participation in the formal sector.Chuck W. Peek & Barbara A. Zsembik - 1994 - Gender and Society 8 (4):525-540.
    The joint effort by the U.S. government and the political elite of Puerto Rico to industrialize the island created increased demand for female labor and a decline in the number of jobs traditionally held by men. The authors examine whether women's labor force participation in the formal sector responds to improving opportunities for women, declining opportunities for men, or the household's changing opportunity structures. Specifically, they examine a woman's return to work after the birth of her first child as the (...)
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  29.  47
    Unholy Force: Toland's Leibnizian 'Consummation' of Spinozism.Ian Leask - 2012 - British Journal for the History of Philosophy 20 (3):499-537.
    This article argues that the Fourth and Fifth of John Toland's Letters to Serena are best understood as a creative confrontation of Spinoza and Leibniz ? one in which crucial aspects of Leibniz's thought are extracted from their original context and made to serve a purpose that is ultimately Spinozistic. Accordingly, it suggests that the critique of Spinoza that takes up so much of the fourth Letter, in particular, should be read as a means of `perfecting' Spinoza (via Leibniz), rather (...)
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  30.  78
    The Podolinsky Myth: An Obituary Introduction to 'Human Labour and Unity of Force', by Sergei Podolinsky.Paul Burkett & John Bellamy Foster - 2008 - Historical Materialism 16 (1):115-161.
    The relationship between Marxism and ecology has been sullied by Martinez-Alier's influential interpretation of Engels's reaction to the agricultural energetics of Sergei Podolinsky. This introduction to the first English translation of Podolinsky's 1883 Die Neue Zeit piece evaluates Martinez-Alier's interpretation in light of the four distinct but closely related articles Podolinsky published over the years 1880–3. This evaluation also emphasises the important but previously underrated role of energy analysis in Marx's Capital. Engels's criticisms of Podolinsky are found to be quite (...)
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  31.  12
    Women, Schooling, and Labor Force Participation, 1900-1920: Some Reflections on the Use of Quantification in Social History. [REVIEW]Christine M. Shea - 1986 - Education and Culture 6:3.
  32.  73
    Values in International Business: Faces of a Faceless Labour Force.Leticia Peña - 1998 - Journal of Human Values 4 (1):65-76.
    The American State of California passed Proposition 187 in November 1994, thus confirming the discontent of the 'contented electoral majority' with spending taxpayer dollars on education and health care for undocumented immigrants. The paper traces the unfortunate set of events to their source, the initiation of the US-Mexico Bracero Programme in 1940. This retrospective enables us to observe how US policy switched from requesting assistance from Mexico during labour shortage to repudiating the sons of those who had come to (...)
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  33.  14
    London in the age of industrialization: Entrepreneurs, labour force and living conditions, 1700–1850.Tim Cloudsley - 1994 - History of European Ideas 18 (5):833-835.
  34.  78
    Are Workers Forced to Work?Douglas Ehring - 1989 - Canadian Journal of Philosophy 19 (4):589 - 602.
    G. A. Cohen, in his ‘The Structure of Proletarian Unfreedom,’ addresses the classical Marxist claim that workers are forced to sell their labour power under capitalism. This claim has been the object of much debate and controversy. Cohen brings his very considerable analytical skills to bear on this question with the result that he supports, in distinctive but non-conflicting ways, both sides of the controversy. On Cohen’s analysis this claim is ambiguous, i.e., the term ‘proletariat’ has two importantly (...)
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  35. Aristotelian force as Newtonian power.John Aidun - 1982 - Philosophy of Science 49 (2):228-235.
    Aristotle's rule of proportions of the factors of motion, presented in VII 5 of the Physics, characterizes Aristotelian force. Observing that the locomotion to which Aristotle applied the Rule is the motion produced by manual labor, I develop an interpretation of the factors of motion that reveals that Aristotelian force is Newtonian power. An alternate interpretation of the Rule by Toulmin and Goodfield implicitly identifies Aristotelian force with Newtonian force. In order to account for the absence of an acceleration in (...)
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  36.  40
    Presiganga, a galley in the tropics.Paloma Siqueira Fonseca - 2008 - Archai: Revista de Estudos Sobre as Origens Do Pensamento Ocidental 1:77-81.
    The forced labor and the corporal punishment stayed longtime as practices of legal punishment. From ancient Rome to portuguese America, this long duration was associated to labor system of slavery. During the independence process of Brazil, a prison ship gathered these practices, like an old Roman galley.
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  37.  33
    Education and Industry: Women, Schooling, and Labor Force Participation; 1900-1920.John L. Rury - 1986 - Education and Culture 6:2.
  38.  14
    The Transformation of the U.S. Labor Force: The Interaction of Industry and Occupation.Joachim Singelmann & Harley L. Browning - 1978 - Politics and Society 8 (3-4):481-509.
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  39.  39
    Labor Migration and Climate Change Adaptation.Jamie Draper - 2022 - American Political Science Review 116 (3):1012-1024.
    Social scientific evidence suggests that labor migration can increase resilience to climate change. For that reason, some have recently advocated using labor migration policy as a tool for climate adaptation. This paper engages with the normative question of whether, and under what conditions, states may permissibly use labor migration policy as a tool for climate adaptation. I argue that states may use labor migration policy as a tool for climate adaptation and may even have a duty to do so, subject (...)
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  40.  23
    Amy L. Fairchild. Science at the Borders: Immigrant Medical Inspection and the Shaping of the Modern Industrial Labor Force. xii + 385 pp., index. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2003. $48. [REVIEW]Bonnie Blustein - 2004 - Isis 95 (3):503-504.
  41.  19
    Affirming a Weak Force: The Pious Vow of an Animal to Come?Giustino De Michele - 2018 - Oxford Literary Review 40 (1):55-75.
    The appearance, in 1967, of the name of Jacques Derrida on the scene of contemporary thought was indeed plural; given the number of books published under his signature in that year, but also, more intrinsically, because this appearance was declined under a contradictory aegis: since the beginning, the problem of writing had to struggle between ‘two interpretations of interpretation’, one affirmative, the other nostalgic, between a Nietzschean affirmation and a Rousseauist reverie. This internal debate carried on its labour, remarking (...)
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  42.  28
    Transnational mothering and forced migration: Understanding the experiences of Zimbabwean mothers in the UK.Elisabetta Zontini & Roda Madziva - 2012 - European Journal of Women's Studies 19 (4):428-443.
    A growing body of scholarship has documented the experiences of different groups of migrants involved in the maintenance and development of transnational families worldwide showing that proximity is not a prerequisite of family life and that families can successfully be done from a distance. While most work deals with the experiences of labour migrants less attention has been paid to forced migrants. Still little is known about families that fail to operate transnationally and are broken by the migration (...)
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  43.  34
    Night labour, social reproduction and political struggle in the ‘Working Day’ chapter of Marx's Capital.Paul Apostolidis - forthcoming - European Journal of Political Theory.
    This essay offers a new reading of Marx's chapter on ‘the working day’ in Capital Volume One by exploring the textual theme of night-time work. Even as Marx emphasises how the lengthening workday enables the super-exploitation of producers’ wage labour, his depictions of nocturnal experiences highlight more forcefully the destruction of workers’ reproductive resources, capacities and relationships. Night comes to represent the contracted time, condensed space, petrified relational bonds and thwarted desires for human reproduction in a free, fulsome sense (...)
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  44.  33
    Reproducing Labor Inequalities: Challenges for Feminists Conceptualizing Care at the Intersections of Gender, Race, and Class.Mignon Duffy - 2005 - Gender and Society 19 (1):66-82.
    The author uses census data to assess the consequences of two alternative theoretical formulations of care work for understanding the intersections of gender, race, and economic inequalities in paid care. The nurturance conceptualization focuses on care as relationship while the reproductive labor framework includes both relational and nonrelational jobs that maintain and reproduce the labor force. An empirical application of both models to the labor market shows that placing increasing theoretical emphasis on nurturant care privileges the experiences of white women (...)
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  45.  24
    Improving Labor Outcomes among People with Mild or Moderate Mental Illness through Law and Policy Reform.Benjamin A. Barsky, Richard G. Frank & Sherry A. Glied - 2023 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 51 (2):355-362.
    Mild and moderate mental illnesses can hinder labor force participation, lead to work interruptions, and hamper earning potential. Targeted interventions have proven effective at addressing these problems. But their potential depends on labor protections that enable people to take advantage of these interventions while keeping jobs and income.
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  46.  48
    Labour Practice, Decent Work and Human Rights Performance and Reporting: The Impact of Women Managers.Albertina Paula Monteiro, Isabel-María García-Sánchez & Beatriz Aibar-Guzmán - 2022 - Journal of Business Ethics 180 (2):523-542.
    This paper uses a sample of 1243 international firms for the period 2013–2017 to analyse the effect that a greater presence of women in management teams has on business behaviour in relation to labour and human rights, and the mediating role of improved performance in these rights on corporate transparency. The results show that gender diversity in management teams is positively associated with performance in relation to labour and human rights, and that such a performance acts as a (...)
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  47.  28
    Christian Mercy and Pro-Social Behaviors in the Memory of the Deportation of German Ethnics from Romania to the Soviet Union.Lavinia Betea - 2016 - Journal for the Study of Religions and Ideologies 15 (45):310-337.
    If the classic history of events is written in the spirit of winners, the approaches of collective mental reveal that wars are disasters and collective traumas for all of the involved communities. In the following pages we will present the decantation in long term memory of a relevant fact – the deportation of German ethnics from Romania to forced labor in the Soviet Union. On the base of a secret directive, sent by Stalin, approximately 75 000 Romanian citizens of (...)
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  48. Egoism, Labour, and Possession: A reading of “Interiority and Economy,” Section II of Lévinas' Totality of Infinity.Jacob Blumenfeld - 2014 - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 45 (2):107-117.
    Lévinas is the philosopher of the absolutely Other, the thinker of the primacy of the ethical relation, the poet of the face. Against the formalism of Kantian subjectivity, the totality of the Hegelian system, the monism of Husserlian phenomenology and the instrumentalism of Heideggerian ontology, Lévinas develops a phenomenological account of the ethical relation grounded in the idea of infinity, an idea which is concretely produced in the experience with the absolutely other, particularly, in their face. The face of the (...)
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  49.  42
    Exploitation, Labor, and Basic Income.Michael W. Howard - 2015 - Analyse & Kritik 37 (1-2):281-304.
    Proposals for a universal basic income have reemerged in public discourse for a variety of reasons. Marx’s critique of exploitation suggests two apparently opposed positions on a basic income. On the one hand, a basic income funded from taxes on labor would appear to be exploitative of workers. On the other hand, a basic income liberates everyone from the vulnerable condition in which one is forced to sell one’s labor in order to survive, and so seems to be one (...)
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  50.  35
    Labour Pain, ‘Natal Politics’ and Reproductive Justice for Black Birth Givers.Maria Fannin - 2019 - Body and Society 25 (3):22-48.
    The reception of Elaine Scarry’s landmark text, The Body in Pain, focuses in part on exploring how pain might be understood as beneficial or therapeutic. Childbirth is often cited as the paradigmatic instance of this kind of beneficial pain. This essay examines conceptualizations of labour pain in biomedical, natural childbirth and reproductive justice movements that explore the limits of Scarry’s description of pain as ‘unshareable’. Political struggles over pain in childbirth centre on the legibility of pain in labour. (...)
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