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- Title
Deadwood and paternalism: rationalizing casual labour in an Indian company town.
- Authors
Sanchez, Andrew
- Abstract
This article is based upon ethnographic research in the Indian company town of Jamshedpur, in the Tata Motors and Telcon companies. I relate the local shift towards casual labour since the 1990s to managerial discourses that rationalize this development. I argue that whilst flexible accumulation may represent a global transformation of employment regimes, the local implementation of this process relies upon a discursive continuity with the past. Referencing a historical language of cultural poverty, predominantly Bengali managers in Jamshedpur continue to claim paternal authority over their mainly Bihari employees, despite no longer fulfilling their traditional 'parental' roles vis-à-vis the provision of permanent employment. In the latter sections of the article, I discuss the managerial spectre of inefficient permanent workers; 'deadwood' whom it is perceived that casualization can prune from the workforce. I argue that whilst permanent employees may exhibit less commitment to the work process than their casual counterparts, their presence on the shop-floor suggests continuity with the company town ideal and forestalls resistance among casual workers. Far from disembedding labour from social relations, neoliberal employment regimes in Jamshedpur exploit company town paternalism and cultural prejudices.
- Subjects
JAMSHEDPUR (India); INDIA; ETHNOLOGY research; CULTURE; SOCIAL systems; PATERNALISM; CULTURAL prejudices
- Publication
Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, 2012, Vol 18, Issue 4, p808
- ISSN
1359-0987
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/j.1467-9655.2012.01793.x