4.2 Article

Public Workers' Mobilizations in Egypt: Perceptions of Sector Potential in Textile and Transport

Journal

ILR REVIEW
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/00197939231213350

Keywords

labor unrest; Egypt; perceptions of sector potential; public service workers; Global South

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This article explains the rise of labor unrest in Egypt in the early 2000s, particularly led by public-sector workers. Through two case studies in the textile and transport sectors, the author demonstrates that workers' perceptions of sector potential influenced their ability to protest and compensated for the decline in their sectors' roles in the economy. The perceived underutilization due to corruption and squandered profits helped explain the workers' militancy and their capacity to sustain prolonged protests. These perceptions were informed by the criticism of the state's adoption of neoliberal policies associated with privatization. Despite the decline, workers in these sectors were able to maintain these perceptions because of their continued relevance in the economy. This analysis contributes to the Power Resource Approach by highlighting how perceptions of sector potential can enhance the capacities of workers in declining sectors in the Global South. The author also engages with labor scholarship on Egypt, focusing on grievances rather than solely on workers' economic position and sources of power.
This article contributes to explaining the rise of labor unrest in Egypt in the early 2000s, led initially by public-sector workers. Using two case studies in textile and transport, the author shows that perceptions of sector potential affected workers' ability to protest and compensated for the decline in their sectors' roles in the economy. The perceptions of underutilization due to corruption and to sector viability based on squandered profits help explain workers' militancy and capacities to mount an extended protest campaign. These perceptions build on discourses that critique the state's adoption of neoliberal policies associated with privatization. Workers could develop these perceptions because their sectors still played a role in the economy despite their decline. The analysis contributes to the Power Resource Approach by showing how perceptions of sector potential enhance capacities among Global South workers in declining sectors. To explain labor unrest, the author engages labor scholarship on Egypt that focuses on grievances rather than on workers' economic position and sources of power.

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