"Fine books, like that written by Collins, call attention to the interconnected global economy in which we are thoroughly embedded as consumers and workers."--Kathleen Staudt "NWSA Journal "
"This is a thoughtful and engaging book on the labor process and labor politics of the global apparel industry. Global sourcing, Jane Collins has found, is not simply a cost-driven corporate decision but is a political economic process shaped by an array of social, political, and international institutions, resulting in varying degrees of corporate localization and deterritorialization."--. . . . Written in accessible prose and integrating the findings of recent scholarly works on the history and organization of the textile and apparel industry, Collins's book makes a timely and critical intervention in the public debate on globalization, outsourcing, and labor rights."--Ching Kwan Lee "American Journal of Sociology "
"Collins' book attempts to humanize the trend toward a global economy, demonstrating the link between individual factory workers and the corporate players in the boardroom. . . . Collins' humanization of this process connects the problem with a solution, explaining how transnational workers can organize in this environment to demand better treatment from their distant corporate employers."
--Jesica Scheppmann "Berkeley Journal of Employment and Labor Law "
"Books about international trade, like
Threads, are essential for gender/women's studies courses, research, and action. . . . Fine books, like that written by Collins, call atention to the interconnected global economy in which we are thoroughly embedded as consumers and workers."--Kathleen Staudt "Newspaper Tree "
"The opening sections, drawing out the development of the global apparel industry and setting more recent changes in a longer historical context, in themselves make the book worthwhile. . . .
Threads is both readable and scholarly, two attributes that are infrequently found together."--Francis Watkins "Social Anthropology "
"
Threads makes a welcome contribution to the literature on the ways that global industries are shaping the lives of workers across the world. It weaves together discussions of firm strategies in producing a global though segmented labour market, with workers' perspectives on working and organizing in the new context. . . . This book should be on everyone's list."--Isa Baud "Development & Change "
"A brilliant book.
Threads offers a timely and original analysis of race and gender in the shifting political economy of the global apparel industry. Collins is at ease with economic statistics and archival materials, and her intelligent interviews with shop-floor workers, union activists, and CEOs allow her to offer a breakthrough account of this flashpoint of globalization."Micaela di Leonardo, Northwestern University--Micaela di Leonardo, Northwestern University
"Instead of treating globalization as an inevitable fact, Collins shows why it must be understood as an uneven process, shaped by management decisions, state policies, and labor's responses; she challenges common misperceptions about labor, skill, and technology and offers surprising new insights into the North American apparel industry.By laying bare the underlying dynamics of globalization, Threadsmakes an important contribution to discussions about the future." Gay W. Seidman, University of Wisconsin-Madison--Gay W. Seidman, University of Wisconsin-Madison
"A good introduction for newcomers to the subject. [The book] provides a solid and succinct description of the global apparel industry which is based upon an exhaustive literature review. The case studies, based upon original research, are particularly compelling. It is written in a clear, non-technical style, making the book useful for several disciplines."
--Katie Quan "Labor Studies Journal "
"
Threads is both timely and exceptionally well documented. A model of scholarship."
--
American Ethnologist -- (11/04/2004)
Jane L. Collins is a professor of rural sociology and women's studies at the University of Wisconsin, Madison. She is the author of Unseasonal Migrations: The Effects of Rural Labor Scarcity in Peru and coauthor of Reading National Geographic, the latter published by the University of Chicago Press.