Jos Gamble and Qihai Huang (2009) One store, two employment systems: core, periphery and flexibility in China’s retail sector. British Journal of Industrial Relations, 47 (1). pp. 1 -26. ISSN 1467-8543
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Research on ‘flexible’ or ‘contingent work’, derived primarily from manufacturing and production contexts in Western settings, has often been theorized in terms of a coreperiphery model. Based upon ethnographic research on vendor representatives and regular store employees conducted at a multinational retail firm in China, we indicate that this model is insufficient to capture the complexity of employment arrangements in this context. This paper delineates the co-existence of two employment systems and a quadrilateral relationship in which workers’ interests sometimes overlap but often compete. Our research also indicates that institutional arrangements in China significantly affect the strategies that are open to firms and the consequent structure of employment relations.
This is a Draft version This version's date is: 2009 This item is peer reviewed
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Deposited by () on 23-Feb-2010 in Royal Holloway Research Online.Last modified on 09-Jul-2010
(C) 2009 Wiley-Blackwell, whose permission to mount this version for private study and research is acknowledged. The repository version is the author's final draft.
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