ABSTRACT

This edited collection examines the labour laws of seven industrializing East Asian societies - China, Indonesia, Malaysia, South Korea, Taiwan, the Philippines and Vietnam - and discusses the variation in their impact across the whole region. Leading scholars from each country consider both laws pertaining to working conditions and industrial relations, and those that regulate the labour market as a whole. Legislation concerning migrant labour, gender equality, employment creation and skills formation is also examined. Adopting their own distinct theoretical perspectives, the authors trace the historical development of labour regulation and reveal that most countries in the region now have quite extensive frameworks.
This book will be particularly useful to people interested in the place of labour law, and law in general, in contemporary East Asian societies.

chapter |26 pages

Labour law and labour market regulation in East Asian states

Problems and issues for comparative inquiry

chapter |28 pages

Labour law in Indonesiaafter Soeharto

Reformasi or replay?

chapter |36 pages

Law and labour market regulation in Malaysia

Beyond the New Economic Policy

chapter |35 pages

Vietnam's labour market

Transition and the role of law

chapter |30 pages

Taiwan's labour law

The end of state corporatism?

chapter |31 pages

Law and labour–management relations in South Korea

Advancing industrial democratisation