Labor Contestation at Walmart Brazil

Limits of Global Diffusion in Latin America

Scott B Martin author João Paulo Cândia Veiga author Katiuscia Moreno Galhera author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Springer Nature Switzerland AG

Published:11th Sep '21

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Labor Contestation at Walmart Brazil cover

This book explores how and why the labor practices of the world’s largest employer, supermarket giant Walmart, were contested by unions and government regulators as it expanded to Latin America starting in the 1990s. With an in-depth case study of Brazil, and a comparative chapter examining Argentina, Chile, and Mexico, this book analyzes the problematic encounter between diffusion of home-office anti-labor practices and evolving national institutional contexts that are quite varied and in some cases enable considerable resistance by unions and/or regulators. Walmart’s “repressive familial” and “anti-union” model is found to generate costs and conflicts that contributed to its unprofitability and ultimate exit from Brazil in 2018. This experience, contrasted with country situations where Walmart’s overall competitive and labor and human resource practices “fit” better with national markets and institutions, underlines the brittle, problematic nature of diffusionist corporate models lacking adaptive capacity to significant cross-national variations across host countries.

ISBN: 9783030746711

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 598g

309 pages

1st ed. 2021