Tapping into the 'standing-reserve': a comparative analysis of workers' training programmes in Kolkata and Toronto

This paper examines employment-related training programmes offered by state funded agencies and multinational corporations in Toronto (Canada) and Kolkata (India). In recent years both cities have witnessed a rise in the service sector industries aligned with global regimes of flexible work and the...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inStudies in continuing education Vol. 37; no. 3; pp. 317 - 332
Main Authors Maitra, Saikat, Maitra, Srabani
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Sydney Routledge 02.09.2015
Taylor & Francis Ltd
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ISSN0158-037X
1470-126X
DOI10.1080/0158037X.2015.1043988

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Summary:This paper examines employment-related training programmes offered by state funded agencies and multinational corporations in Toronto (Canada) and Kolkata (India). In recent years both cities have witnessed a rise in the service sector industries aligned with global regimes of flexible work and the consequent reinvention of a worker subject that is no longer disciplined according to the needs of industrial production. A worker must now be self-regulated, competitive, flexible, with an ability to convey an urbane, English-speaking deportment within the workplace. Training of employees, especially soft skill training becomes crucial in this connection as a form of technology for achieving this end. Based on Martin Heidegger's conceptualisation of 'standing-reserve', we suggest that what training programmes do in the context of neoliberal capitalist production is the creation of an essential quality of human-ness that has to be harnessed, its potentialities tapped and amplified through training. We further suggest that such programmes often remain heavily influenced by race/class/gender hierarchies as well as stereotypical assumptions of desirable/undesirable bodies, forms of socialisation and modes of habitation that often are naturalised in the course of training.
Bibliography:Refereed article. Includes bibliographical references.
Special themed issue : Regimes of Skill and Competency in the Age of Migration
Studies in Continuing Education; v.37 n.3 p.317-332; November 2015
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-1
content type line 14
ISSN:0158-037X
1470-126X
DOI:10.1080/0158037X.2015.1043988