A decolonial revision of Labor Law
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.5377/cuadernojurypol.v3i10.11081Keywords:
Exploitation of classes, sex/gender, collective authority, coloniality of power/decoloniality, Eurocentrism.Abstract
In this work the author proposes the revision of the labour law supported the decolonial theoretically which part to explore the place and the effectiveness of the right to work in the current power relations and found that, in addition to just be, for now , an instrument which sets the rules of the game for the exploitation of the working class, need you to extend their effectiveness, in order to contain and regulate, perspectives infrequently explored by this field of law, namely: (1) the question of the races in Latin America which is before and goes beyond classical inequality of classes that is intended to correct, or at least mitigate by labour standards; (2) the question of genre, which the author raises not as an added question if not primary to understand relations of exploitation and (3) the issue of the democratization of public authority in the hands of the State through a racial reinterpretation of the political participation as budget of the same democratization of labour relations.
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