How do Syrian refugee workers challenge supply chain management in the Turkish garment industry?
Emre Eren Korkmaz, University of Oxford
Wednesday, 17 May 2017, 1pm to 2pm
Seminar Room 1, Queen Elizabeth House, 3 Mansfield Road, Oxford, OX1 3TB
There is an increasing interest in the working conditions of Syrian refugees in Turkey. Apart from the Turkish government, many agencies of the UN, as well as various non-governmental organisations and transnational corporations implement programmes and projects to tackle the varying needs of Syrian refugees. Rather than solely objectifying refugees as a vulnerable group, paying attention to their contribution to industrial relations is crucial in order to acknowledge refugees as active agents capable of changing their lives and the structures within which they operate. Syrian refugees follow a survival strategy based on their social networks that also affects and changes the living and working conditions of local people, and existing labour relations. This presentation focuses on the relations between the informal and formal sectors in Turkey and how such relations have affected the survival strategies of Syrian refugees. In turn, it also attempts to assess how the participation of Syrian refugees in the informal economy has changed these historical relations between formal and informal employment. The presentation will initially provide a general picture of the employment of Syrian refugees in Turkey and then share fieldwork observations.
*Please note this seminar was previously scheduled to take place on 24 May*