Becoming ‘active labour protestors’: Women workers organizing in India’s garment export factories

Thu, Mar 18, 2021

6:30 PM–7:30 PM

This event will take place online via Zoom. Please register below.

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Join Dr. Madhumita Dutta for a lecture on “Becoming ‘active labour protestors’: Women workers organizing in India’s garment export factories.”

India ranks 5th in the global garment exports with an estimated workforce of over 2 million workers. The bedrock of this export industry are poorly paid, migrant women and men. The industry is marked by high rate of exploitation and precarious employment. Women are often perceived as a dispossessed lot without any means to resist their exploitation. What possibilities remain within this narrative to make room for everyday politics and resistances? Looking at the individual and collective struggles of garment workers in two southern Indian states, this lecture highlights the everyday organizing strategies of women resisting their ‘disposability’. Specifically, the lecture draws attention to women’s life stories to demonstrate what can be learnt from them about the conditions under which to imagine, and come to, build labour unions. The lecture contributes to the critical feminist labour scholarship on global factories by explicating the tension between the need to illuminate the extent of exploitation and the urgency of drawing attention to women’s stories.


Madhumita Dutta is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Geography at Ohio State University. She has a PhD in Geography from the University of Durham, United Kingdom and was a postdoctoral fellow at the Center for Global Workers’ Rights at Pennsylvania State University. Before joining the academia, Madhumita worked as an activist in India for over sixteen years, with communities fighting against the excesses of the state and corporate power.

For further details, queries may be directed to Mythri Prasad-Aleyamma [[email protected]]

This event is organized and presented by The Center for Place, Culture and Politics and is co-sponsored by the Center for the Humanities and the Department of Anthropology at the Graduate Center, CUNY.