Abstract
The emergence of China as a ‘world's factory’ in the new millennium was accompanied by the rise of a new working class which was composed of more than 200 million peasant-workers. As internal migrant labourers, these peasant-workers were deprived of citizenship rights to reside in the city and lacked basic labour rights and protections. In order to address the precarious working conditions of migrant workers who were employed by transnational corporations, a global Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) movement emerged, introducing a wide range of transnational corporate codes of conduct, labour standards and labour rights. This article presents a case study of a transnational CSR multi-stakeholder training programme at a Chinese workplace, in an attempt to demonstrate how capital, transnational NGOs and local labour NGOs – and including social workers – are all involved in the project to promote labour rights in China. Specific focus is placed on the role of social workers in enhancing worker participation in this project; the challenges and dilemmas that they encountered in the process, and suggestions are provided regarding the future development of a new model of occupational social work in China.
Acknowledgements
The authors would like to acknowledge the Hong Kong Research Grant Council in support of a research project on ‘Making a New Working Class: A Study of Collective Actions in a Dormitory Labor Regime of South China’ (2007–09) and the Department of Applied Social Sciences, Hong Kong Polytechnic University for providing a large-scale research grant on ‘Corporate Social Work and Corporate Social Responsibility’ (2008–10). We are also grateful to Yu Xiaomin's unfailing assistance for this research.
Notes
1. ‘SAI China Worker/Management Joint Training: a joint proposal from SAI, ITGLWF, CWWN, and ICO’, 2003.
3. ILO Convention 87 refers to the clause, Freedom of Association and Protection of the Right to Organise Convention, 1948.
4. ILO Convention 98 refers to the clause, Right to Organise and Collective Bargaining Convention, 1949.
7. Rural reintegration means that most of the migrant workers would return to their rural communities once they have finished working in the city. For individual workers, rural-to-urban migration is a temporary and not a permanent move from the countryside to the city.
9. ‘SAI China Worker/Management Joint Training: a joint proposal from SAI, ITGLWF, CWWN, and ICO’, 2003.
10. Interviews with workers in August, 2005.
11. Principles on Operation of [RT] Workers' Committee, 6 January 2005.
12. Ibid.
13. CWWN, ‘RT WC election report’
14. CWWN, ‘RT Factories Workers’ Committee Follow-up Training Report: October 2005 to February 2006'
15. CWWN, ‘RT Factories Workers’ Committee Follow-up Training Report:
16. CWWN, ‘[RT] Factories Workers’ Committee Training Report Project Duration – Phase II April 1 2005–March 31 2006'
17. CWWN, ‘RT Factories Workers’ Committee Follow-up Training Report.
18. CWWN trainers notes on the meeting.