Unpacking Global Amazon
Labor, Work, and Community?in E-Commerce Warehousing and Distribution
Edward Elgar Publishing
Will be published approx. on 28. August 2026
Book
Hardback
416 pages
978-1-0353-8044-2 (ISBN)
Description
Positioning Amazon as a key actor reshaping business and labor paradigms in the digitized global economy, this book examines its relationship with labor markets and institutions worldwide. Tracing the company's expansion over three-plus decades and controversies, particularly since the COVID-19 pandemic, based on fresh fieldwork, expert contributors demonstrate how Amazon shapes, and is re-shaped by, its various locations through regulation, conflict, and competition.
Leading scholars examine the complex interplay of Amazon's encounters with markets, institutions, and actors in national and subnational settings. They analyze the consequences of fast-paced, low-skilled labor mandates against the backdrop of fierce resistance from union and civil society campaigners and local competitors. Chapters contribute to key debates, evaluating Amazon's history of anti-union behavior and increasingly algorithmically driven management. Drawing on empirical research, the book assesses union and community efforts and regulatory initiatives that seek to contest and contain the social impacts of a warehousing and delivery system built on speed, worker exploitation, and refashioning economic geographies around immediate one-click consumerism.
An essential resource for understanding the global infrastructure of increasingly digitized multinational tech corporations, this book is an invaluable resource for scholars and students of business management, economics, political economy, human rights, and labour policy. E-commerce and NGO professionals, as well as policymakers, will similarly benefit from its timely and practical discussion of advocacy approaches and policy controversies.
Leading scholars examine the complex interplay of Amazon's encounters with markets, institutions, and actors in national and subnational settings. They analyze the consequences of fast-paced, low-skilled labor mandates against the backdrop of fierce resistance from union and civil society campaigners and local competitors. Chapters contribute to key debates, evaluating Amazon's history of anti-union behavior and increasingly algorithmically driven management. Drawing on empirical research, the book assesses union and community efforts and regulatory initiatives that seek to contest and contain the social impacts of a warehousing and delivery system built on speed, worker exploitation, and refashioning economic geographies around immediate one-click consumerism.
An essential resource for understanding the global infrastructure of increasingly digitized multinational tech corporations, this book is an invaluable resource for scholars and students of business management, economics, political economy, human rights, and labour policy. E-commerce and NGO professionals, as well as policymakers, will similarly benefit from its timely and practical discussion of advocacy approaches and policy controversies.
Reviews / Votes
'Unpacking Global Amazon provides rich, in-depth, and comparative case studies of the causes, impacts, and limits of Amazon's rapid rise within North and South America, Eastern and Western Europe, and Asia, and how and why workers and communities are fighting back. It is a must-read for labor scholars and activists alike.' -- Ellen Reese, University of California, Riverside, USA 'The most expansive analysis of Amazon's global power and of how it can be tamed.' -- Alessandro Delfanti, University of Toronto, Canada 'This authoritative analysis of Amazon's global footprint reveals the threats Amazon's despotic management-by-algorithm poses to workers. Equally important, the authors tell the story of the often-successful global resistance to Amazon's power, with lessons for all who seek to combat the rule of today's corporate titans.' -- Chris Tilly, University of California, Los Angeles, USAMore details
Language
English
Place of publication
Cheltenham
United Kingdom
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Dimensions
Height: 234 mm
Width: 156 mm
ISBN-13
978-1-0353-8044-2 (9781035380442)
Copyright in bibliographic data is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or its licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Edited by Scott B. Martin, Part-Time Associate Professor, Graduate Programs in International Affairs, New School for Social Research, USA and Adjunct Assistant Professor, School of International and Public Affairs, Columbia University, USA, Joao Paulo Veiga, Professor of Political Science, Faculty of Philosophy, Letters and Human Sciences (FFLCH) and Institute of International Relations (IRI), University of Sao Paulo, Brazil, Katiuscia Moreno Galhera, Visiting Professor, Faculty of Humanities, Universdade Federal da Grande Dourados, Brazil and Nikko Bilitza, Researcher, European Centre for Social Welfare Policy and Research, Vienna, Austria