Labour as a ‘Fictive Commodity’: Radically Reconceptualizing Labour Law

Resource type
Authors/contributors
Title
Labour as a ‘Fictive Commodity’: Radically Reconceptualizing Labour Law
Abstract
[E]xamines...some competing accounts of labour law, including ones that rely on Sen's idea of enhancing people's 'capabilities' to live the kinds of lives that they value. [The author] sees a number os trengths with this approach, but also a few important limitations. [Fudge] then goes on to suggest a different basis for conceptualizing labour law: the idea that labour is not a commodity but rather a 'fictive commodity'. The unique problems association with seeling labour create 'regulatory dilemmas' - and the role of labour law is to addrss them. In this context, Fudge uses the 'capabilities' approach but supplements it to argue against the exclusion of unpaid care work from the scope of labour law. --From editors' introduction.
Book Title
The Idea of Labour Law
Place
Oxford
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Date
2013
Pages
120–136
Language
English
Short Title
Labour as a ‘Fictive Commodity’
Extra
Publisher: Oxford University Press Oxford
Citation
Fudge, J. (2013). Labour as a ‘Fictive Commodity’: Radically Reconceptualizing Labour Law. In G. Davidov & B. Langille (Eds.), The Idea of Labour Law (pp. 120–136). Oxford University Press. http://www.academia.edu/download/63276206/Fictive_Commodity20200511-22683-1c518rt.pdf