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制造贫困:墨西哥的边境加工装配业

Manufacturing poverty: the maquiladorization of Mexico.

作者信息

La Botz D

出版信息

Int J Health Serv. 1994;24(3):403-8. doi: 10.2190/HY6R-EY5G-3AXP-VV8N.

Abstract

Based on interviews with social workers, attorneys, feminists, union activists, and factory workers, the author argues that the maquiladora free trade zone of Northern Mexico portends developments under the North American Free Trade Agreement. Today some 500,000 Mexican workers labor in 2,000 factories for $4.50 a day in Mexico's maquiladoras. Two-thirds of the workers are women, many single women who head their households. These women work in the new, modern manufacturing plants in industrial parks, but live in squalid shantytowns without adequate water, sewage, or electricity. On the job, workers face exposures to toxic chemicals and dangerous work processes. The Mexican government does not have the political will, the trained personnel, or the equipment to monitor these occupational health problems. While Mexico's Constitution and labor laws guarantee workers the right to organize, bargain collectively, and strike, in practice the state controls the unions and opposes worker activism. In the face of employer and state repression workers are forced to organize secretly to fight for higher wages and safer conditions.

摘要

基于对社会工作者、律师、女权主义者、工会活动家以及工厂工人的访谈,作者认为墨西哥北部的边境加工自由贸易区预示着北美自由贸易协定下的发展趋势。如今,约50万墨西哥工人在墨西哥边境加工区内的2000家工厂工作,日薪为4.5美元。其中三分之二是女性,许多是独自养家的单身女性。这些女性在工业园区新建的现代化制造工厂工作,但却生活在肮脏的棚户区,那里没有充足的水、污水处理设施或电力供应。在工作中,工人们面临接触有毒化学物质和危险工作流程的风险。墨西哥政府没有政治意愿、训练有素的人员或设备来监测这些职业健康问题。虽然墨西哥宪法和劳动法保障工人组织工会、集体谈判和罢工的权利,但实际上国家控制着工会并反对工人激进主义。面对雇主和国家的镇压,工人们被迫秘密组织起来,为争取更高工资和更安全的工作条件而斗争。

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