2008
DOI: 10.1007/s10708-008-9215-z
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Container ports, local benefits and transportation worker earnings

Abstract: Over the past 50 years, containerization has both enabled and reflected the articulation of increasingly concentrated and complex global trade flows. Once close infrastructural, economic and institutional ties between seaports and port cities have been loosened, since major ports now serve producers and consumers in widely dispersed hinterlands. This process has been especially intense in North America, where west coast ports serve markets across the continent. At the same time, many of the external costs of i… Show more

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Cited by 29 publications
(25 citation statements)
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“…However, research suggests that most of these jobs offer limited advancement and income (BENSMAN, 2008;CHRISTOPHERSON and BELZER, 2009;HALL, 2009). Therefore, to create greater opportunities, localities would have to develop more complex strategies that take advantage of the growth of localization trends in production to attract and build on the final, value-added stages of the production process.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, research suggests that most of these jobs offer limited advancement and income (BENSMAN, 2008;CHRISTOPHERSON and BELZER, 2009;HALL, 2009). Therefore, to create greater opportunities, localities would have to develop more complex strategies that take advantage of the growth of localization trends in production to attract and build on the final, value-added stages of the production process.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As a framework for analysis, we are concentrating on three dimensions that are considered as essential for the port‐city interface: economies, markets, and knowledge production (see Table ). Our analysis is applied, first, to the inherent notion of ports as drivers of local economic development, which has received critical scrutiny recently (Hall ; Ferrari et al . ).…”
Section: A Relational View: Exploring the Ties And Tensions Of The Pomentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In relation to port operations, the term ‘port work’ lacks its past clarity (Bichou and Gray, ). In some instances, those who hold jobs critical to the workings of the port are in fact located off‐site or even offshore (Hall, ). The question is what impact do such developments have on the port labour process?…”
Section: Debatesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The recent transformation of the port labour process has consequences for port workers although the impact in terms of the organisation and operation of the labour process has not yet been addressed (see Turnbull, ; Davis, ; Turnbull and Wass, ; Bonacich and Wilson, ; Hall, ). One impact may be in relation to strategic jobs, that is, the strategic positioning of frontline jobs in the ongoing balancing of power relations at the waterfront.…”
Section: Debatesmentioning
confidence: 99%