TY - JOUR
T1 - Hidden in Plain Sight
T2 - The Dynamics of Work Exploitation in Fast-Food Franchises in Peru
AU - Castro-Aróstegui, Patricia
AU - Ramírez-Montes, Cristina Valeria
AU - Pasco-Dalla-Porta, Mario Marcello
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 Common Ground Research Networks. All rights reserved.
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - Labor movements have undoubtedly achieved a significant milestone in legalizing the prohibition of the most inhumane forms of work exploitation. However, exploitative relationships remain a common feature in many well-established industries, a problem aggravated by neoliberal policies implemented worldwide. Despite its persistent prevalence, this topic has not received substantive attention in the management sciences. Drawing on business ethics and critical management approaches, this article seeks to delve into the dynamics of work exploitation in fast-food franchises in Peru using thirty-one in-depth interviews with workers and documentary analysis of corporate policies and regulations on human resource management. The study focuses on three dimensions of work exploitation—insufficient economic compensation, workday alterations, and work overload—describing the specific practices and elucidating the mechanisms through which they are perpetuated in the organizational contexts analyzed. This study is significant because it renews interest in this phenomenon within the discipline and highlights the adverse effects it has on workers in this industry. At the same time, it is also a call for managers to assume their responsibility to provide workers with fair and adequate compensation, stable work hours, and manageable workloads.
AB - Labor movements have undoubtedly achieved a significant milestone in legalizing the prohibition of the most inhumane forms of work exploitation. However, exploitative relationships remain a common feature in many well-established industries, a problem aggravated by neoliberal policies implemented worldwide. Despite its persistent prevalence, this topic has not received substantive attention in the management sciences. Drawing on business ethics and critical management approaches, this article seeks to delve into the dynamics of work exploitation in fast-food franchises in Peru using thirty-one in-depth interviews with workers and documentary analysis of corporate policies and regulations on human resource management. The study focuses on three dimensions of work exploitation—insufficient economic compensation, workday alterations, and work overload—describing the specific practices and elucidating the mechanisms through which they are perpetuated in the organizational contexts analyzed. This study is significant because it renews interest in this phenomenon within the discipline and highlights the adverse effects it has on workers in this industry. At the same time, it is also a call for managers to assume their responsibility to provide workers with fair and adequate compensation, stable work hours, and manageable workloads.
KW - Exploitation Mechanisms
KW - Fair Wages
KW - Fast-Food Industry
KW - Labor Exploitation
KW - Work Overload
KW - Workday
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85213232628&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.18848/2327-8013/CGP/v24i02/125-156
DO - 10.18848/2327-8013/CGP/v24i02/125-156
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85213232628
SN - 2327-8013
VL - 24
SP - 125
EP - 156
JO - Organizational Cultures
JF - Organizational Cultures
IS - 2
ER -