Loading...
“An eight-hour day for women workers”: Negotiating working time in the Bulgarian textile industry between international labour politics and the shop floor, 1890s to 1930s
Editors
Title / Series / Name
Journal of Contemporary Central and Eastern Europe
Publication Volume
Publication Issue
Pages
Authors
Editors
Keywords
Eight-hour day
Protective legislation
Gendered working time
Labour inspection
Bulgarian textile industry
ILO
Protective legislation
Gendered working time
Labour inspection
Bulgarian textile industry
ILO
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14018/14061
Abstract
The article investigates the issue of the eight-hour workday and its application from the early 1890s – when it first appeared on the Bulgarian organized labour movement’s agenda following the decisions of the Second International – to its adoption in national legislation as well as by the International Labour Organization in 1919, and finally, the enforcement of the eight-hour day in the Bulgarian textile industry between the two world wars. This article explores continuities and changes in the struggle to adopt and enforce the eight-hour day, conceptualizing them as parts of a single negotiated social process. The article employs a gendered and multi-scale approach to explore how working time limits were negotiated on and between the shop floor, the national political stage, and in international labour organizations by diverse social groups such as (un)organized (women) workers, trade unions and labour activists with various political affiliations, the state through its labour inspectorate, as well the International Labour Organization. The article goes beyond the gender-neutral language of legal documents, instead arguing that the eight-hour day was conceptualized differently – with some variations depending on women’s life-course stage and social circumstances – and held particular importance for women workers.
Topic
Publisher
Place of Publication
Type
Journal article
Date
2023-07-17
Language
ISBN
Identifiers
10.1080/25739638.2023.2227513