
Labour And The Wage: A Critical Perspective Offers A New Perspective On Why Labour Law Struggles To Respond To Problems Such As Low Pay And Under-inclusive Employment. A Marxian-inspired Ontological Approach Sheds New Light On The Role Of Labour Law In A Capitalist Economy And On The Limitations And Potential Of Labour Law When It Comes To Bringing About Social Change. It Illustrates This Through The Lens Of The Wage. The Book Develops A Legal Genealogy That Explores The Shifting Portfolio Of Concepts Through Which The Wage Has Been Conceptualized In Legal Discourse As Capitalism Has Developed. This Exploration Spans From The Norman Conquest To The Present Day, And Covers Diverse Issues Such As The Decasualization Of The Docks, Sweated Labour, The Truck System, Tax-credits, Tips, And Minimum Wages. Labour And The Wage Provides One Of The Most In-depth And Comprehensive Analyses Of The Wage To Date, While, At The Same Time, Shedding New Light On The Contradictory Role, Or Function, Of Labour Law In The Context Of Capitalism.
This book investigates why contemporary labor law fails to adequately address systemic issues such as low pay and under-inclusive employment by examining the legal conceptualization of the wage. Author Zoe Adams utilizes a Marxian-inspired ontological framework to analyze the function of labor law within a capitalist economy. By tracing the legal genealogy of the wage, the text argues that the inherent contradictions of capitalism limit the capacity of legal structures to facilitate meaningful social change.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Legal scholars and labor historians identify this work as a rigorous contribution to the critical study of employment law. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose and the depth of the historical research provided by the author.
Page Count:
304
Publication Date:
2020-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0192602659
ISBN-13:
9780192602657
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