Description
This book offers an innovative, interdisciplinary approach to thinking about inequality, and to understanding how inequality is produced and reproduced in the global South.
Without the safety net of the various Northern welfare states, inequality in the global South is not merely a socio-economic problem, but an existential threat to the social contract that underpins the democratic state and society itself. Only a response that is firmly grounded in the context of the global South can hope to address this problem. This collection brings together scholars from across the globe, with a particular focus on the global South, to address broad thematic areas such as the conceptual and methodological challenges of measuring inequality; the political economy of inequality in the global South; inequality in work, households and the labour market; and inequalities in land, spaces and cities. The book concludes by suggesting alternatives for addressing inequality in the global South and around the world.
The pioneering ideas and theories put forward by this volume make it essential reading for students and researchers of global inequality across the fields of sociology, economics, law, politics, global studies and development studies.
Table of Contents
Preface
David Francis, Imraan Valodia and Edward Webster
Part 1: Introductions and Conceptual Questions on Inequality in the South
1. Towards a Southern Approach to Inequality: Inequality Studies in South Africa and the Global South
Edward Webster, Imraan Valodia and David Francis
2. Is Hierarchy the Same as Inequality?
Dilip Menon
3. Inequality Under Globalization: State of Knowledge and Implications for Economics
James K. Galbraith and Jaehee Choi
Part 2: The Political Economy of Inequality in the Global South
4. A Survey of Trends in Macroeconomic Policy and Development in the Global South: From World War II to the Global Financial Crisis and Beyond
Vishnu Padayachee
5. Economic Power and Regulation: The Political Economy of Metals, Machinery and Equipment Industries in South Africa
Sumayya Goga, Pamela Mondliwa and Simon Roberts
6. Inegalitarian Growth: India and Brazil Compared
Alexandre de Freitas Barbosa, Maria Cristina Cacciamali and Gerry Rodgers
Part 3: Work, Households and the Labour Market
7. The Crisis of Social Reproduction in Petty Commodity Production and Large-scale Mining: A Southern Perspective on Gender Inequality
Hibist Kassa
8. Vocational Education and Inequalities in Transitions from Education to Work in Three African Countries
Stephanie Allais
Part 4: Land, Space and Cities
9. Investigating Infrastructures of Urban Inequality
Margot Rubin, Melanie Samson, Sian Butcher, Avril Joffe, Stefania Merlo, Laila Smith and Alex Wafer
10. Social Reproduction at End Moments: Land, Class Formation and Rural Economies in Ghana and South Africa
Akua Britwam and Ben Scully
Part 5: Alternatives
11. Minimum Wages: Tackling Labour Market Inequality
Patrick Belser, David Francis, Kim Jurgensen and Imraan Valodia
12. Building Counter Power in the Workplace: South Africa’s Inequality Paradox
Edward Webster
13. Global Inequality and Human Rights
Radhika Balakrishnan
14. Conclusion
David Francis, Edward Webster and Imraan Valodia



