Fahreen Alamgir
RMIT University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Fahreen Alamgir.
Human Relations | 2015
Fahreen Alamgir; George Cairns
This article discusses the experience of economic inequality of badli workers in the state-owned jute mills of the postcolonial state of Bangladesh, and how this inequality is constituted and perpetuated. Nominally appointed to fill posts during the temporary absence of permanent workers, the reality of badli workers’ employment is very different. They define themselves as ‘a different category of workers’, with limited economic entitlements. We undertake content analysis of the badli workers’ narratives to identify elements that they themselves consider constitute these economic entitlements. We consider their perceptions of discrimination and exclusion and explain how, in response to these feelings, they construct their survival strategy. From this, through the writings of Armatya Sen, we discuss the badli workers’ contextual experience and understanding of economic inequality in relation to extant theoretical understandings, seeking to contribute to the field and to empirical studies in the subaltern context.
Human Relations | 2018
Fahreen Alamgir; Subhabrata Bobby Banerjee
This article reports the findings of a field study on the emergence of collective agreements led by global brands enacting compliance measures to improve safety and working conditions in the Bangladesh garment industry. We explore how key actors in the Bangladesh garment sector who constitute the local production system of the global supply chain experienced the implementation of global agreements on factory safety. We argue that global safety compliance measures through multi-stakeholder initiatives provide legitimacy to multinational corporations and their global brands but do little to address the structural problems arising from exploitative pricing and procurement practices, which are the key reasons for deplorable working conditions in garment factories. Our findings indicate that neoliberal development policies of the state, where local economies are incorporated into global production networks, resulted in differential treatment and regulation of specific populations that comprise garment factory workers. The reconfiguration of state power to meet the demands of global supply chains also involved use of state violence to suppress dissent while undermining labour rights and working conditions. Our article contributes to the politicization of multinational corporations in global production chains by showing how contestations between workers, factory owners, the state, trade unions and multinational corporations create new private forms of governance and new regimes of compliance in the industry.
Annual Meeting of the Academy of Management: The Power of Words | 2014
Fahreen Alamgir
Journal of Business Ethics | 2018
Ozan Nadir Alakavuklar; Fahreen Alamgir
DECISION | 2014
Fahreen Alamgir
Annual Meeting of the Academy of Management 2013: Capitalism in Question | 2013
Fahreen Alamgir
Academy of Management Proceedings | 2018
Fahreen Alamgir; Ozan Nadir Alakavuklar
QUT Business School | 2015
Fahreen Alamgir; George Cairns
Annual Meeting of the Academy of Management : Opening Governance | 2015
Fahreen Alamgir
QUT Business School | 2014
Fahreen Alamgir; George Cairns