Cheap labor at a cost: Examining interns' perceptions of discrimination

2008 ◽  
Author(s):  
Corbin Wong ◽  
Kevin Masick ◽  
Ourania Vasilatos
Keyword(s):  
2012 ◽  
Author(s):  
Catherine E. Connelly ◽  
Sandra L. Fisher ◽  
Theresa Korbar

2020 ◽  
Vol 6 (3) ◽  
pp. 169-179
Author(s):  
R. S. Rogulin

This paper discusses the urgent problem of Russian graduates: job search after graduation. It is shown that, in connection with the growing population of the country due to migrants, the arrival of cheap labor from neighboring countries and other economic factors, the search for a decent job as a graduate remains a difficult and relevant problem in modern Russia. The result of this study can be considered as follows. It is shown that there is the possibility of decent earnings in the scientific field of activity when working with students. A mathematical model and an algorithm for simulating the demonstrated situation are developed. It is shown when a graduate should start searching for additional income and when he can catch up with the total amount of money paid if he went to work in a commercial company. This research is purely theoretical.


2018 ◽  
Vol 38 (1) ◽  
pp. 35-52
Author(s):  
Joshua R Eichen

This essay looks at the historical geography of sugar plantations in Northeast Brazil during the 16th- and 17th-centuries to critique the spatio-temporality of the discourse of the Anthropocene. I argue that sugar plantations were key places in early systemic cycles of capital accumulation with their grim calculus of cheap labor-power and acceptable deaths. Sugar plantations were simultaneously prototypical racializing state actors and part of the emergent relations of capital changing the climate. With their rationalized, time-disciplined labor for processing cane into sugar, plantations were not only fundamentally proto-industrial sites, but also one of capital’s laboratories of modernity. They were primordial sites of proletarianization, of spatio-temporal patterns that repopulated the Americas and central in the production not of the Anthropocene but of the racializing Capitalocene.


2002 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 47-68
Author(s):  
Sang Hoon Nam ◽  
Tim Craig

This research investigates the current state of foreign direct investment by firms from South Korea. Korean FDI is found to be increasingly diverse in location and purpose; small and medium sized firms are investing primarily in Asia in search of cheap labor, while large firms are investing in major markets worldwide to secure market share and to acquire and develop technology. The applicability of Dunning’s eclectic theory to Korean FDI is discussed, and theoretical refinements concerning ownership advantages are suggested. Implementation challenges involve HRM, and vary according to whether the labor an investment requires is commodity-like or skilled.


Author(s):  
Eda Kılıç

Women have been seen as cheap labor and have participated in the economic life less than their male counterparts since the Industrial Revolution, where they joined the waged labor pool. Though the reasons for the women's low participation in the workforce are various; Turkey's current social structure in particular and the social gender perception which acts as the base of this structure emerge as key determinants. For this reason, establishing the general status of female labor in Turkey and comparing the international and national statistical data from a global perspective around the social gender inequality and the distribution of labor based on social gender is the purpose of this study.


Diálogo ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 19 (2) ◽  
pp. i-2
Author(s):  
Elizabeth Coonrod Martínez
Keyword(s):  

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