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Synergistic state governance of labour standards in global value chains: forced labour in the Malaysia-Nepal-UK medical gloves supply chain

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posted on 2024-08-12, 10:36 authored by James A Brown, Alex Hughes, Mahmood Bhutta, Alexander Trautrims, Mei TruebaMei Trueba
Drawing on research into medical gloves global value chains (GVCs), this article examines the interacting roles that states differently positioned in GVCs have played in preventing and eliminating forced labour. Our case study, based on a worker survey and semi-structured interviews across GVC actors, focuses on forced labour in the Malaysian medical gloves sector during the COVID-19 pandemic, linking production in Malaysia, end markets in the UK (primarily through procurement for the National Health Service), and migrant-sending countries, especially Nepal. We analyze the intermeshing effects of the different roles of states, operating at either the horizontal or vertical level of GVC governance, in terms of contributing to issues of forced labour. We identify three state roles in the Malaysia-UK medical gloves chain: producer state (Malaysia), migrant-sending state (Nepal) and regulator-buyer state (UK). We also identify some of the most persistent barriers to resolving forced labour in the value chain. Our research illustrates that Malaysia’s complex regulatory, political and institutional dynamics most directly influence forced labour in gloves production, but Nepal’s migration policies and the UK’s healthcare procurement practices also create forced labour risk in Malaysia. Advancing Gereffi and Lee’s (2016: 25) notion of “synergistc governance” and Jessop’s (2016) strategic-relational approach (SRA) to the state, we thus argue that the creation of sustained and positive regulatory synergies among states differently positioned in GVCs is necessary for the prevention and elimination of forced labour.

Funding

Tackling Modern Slavery in Malaysian medical gloves factories, using a whole system approach to the supply chain : AHRC-ARTS & HUMANITIES RESEARCH COUNCIL | AH/V008676/1

History

Publication status

  • Published

File Version

  • Published version

Journal

Competition and Change

ISSN

1024-5294

Publisher

SAGE

Department affiliated with

  • BSMS Publications
  • Global Health and Infection Publications

Institution

University of Sussex

Full text available

  • Yes

Peer reviewed?

  • Yes