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Authors:Dennis Arnold  Toh Han Shih
Affiliation:1. Department of Geography , University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill , Chapel Hill, NC, 27599-3220, USA arnold.dennis@gmail.com;3. Department of Geography , University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill , Chapel Hill, NC, 27599-3220, USA
Abstract:The expansion of the global economy and the governance deficit it has generated raise questions about the possibilities for regulating the practices of participants in global production networks. This paper focuses on the regulation of industrial relations in Cambodia's textile and garment industry – a unique ensemble of state, trade union, private sector and international institutions that is promoted as a “fair model of globalisation.” We track the trajectory of Cambodia's industrialisation and insertion into the global economy over three interrelated phases: first, the beginnings of export-orientated garment production in the mid- to late 1990s; secondly, the promotion of Cambodia as an “ethical producer” from 1999; and, thirdly, privileging “competitiveness” in global production networks over labour compliance for its advantage. In doing so we centre our analysis on the complex intertwining of global production, the genesis of the unique ensemble of actors in Cambodia and the anomaly of Cambodia's labour movement.
Keywords:Better Factories Cambodia  informal labour  global production networks  industrialisation  governance  textile and garment industry
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