Workplace (in)justice, law and labour resistance in Vietnam
Abstract
The limitations of the Labour Code and its implementation in
Vietnam have been identified by scholars as the main reasons for
the phenomenon of wildcat strikes since the country’s economic
opening in the early 1990s. Yet there has been little analysis
concerning how workers themselves perceive the Labour Code and
other aspects of labour law, and how labour law matters in
workers’ resistance to workplace injustice. This thesis aims to
fill this gap, addressing the question ‘How does labour law
shape labour resistance in Vietnam?’
Adopting a socio-legal approach, the thesis understands labour
law as a combination of three things: (1) the labour law regime,
which includes legal institutions and processes set out in the
Labour Code and other measures to enhance its implementation; (2)
the language used in the Code and the values and understandings
embedded in it; and (3) the practices through which the Code and
associated state policies and regulations are implemented (or not
implemented) by officials, factory managers, and others. The
thesis develops an understanding of labour law from workers’
perspectives. It examines the extent to which workers’ values
and ideas about justice are shaped by and conform with, on the
one hand, the language of the labour law regime and the values
embedded in that language, and on the other hand, experiences and
discourse that differ from those language and values.
Based on seven months of qualitative fieldwork conducted in 2014
and 2015 and an investigation of factory strikes and workers’
complaint letters in Đồng Nai Province, an industrial hub in
the south of Vietnam, the thesis argues that labour law is only
one factor shaping workers’ articulation of what is fair and
unfair and generating their resistance to injustice. The way
workers turn (or do not turn) to labour law depends on their
perceptions of the relationship between law and the morality of
workplace behaviour. These perceptions, in turn, are constructed
through their experiences on the shop floor and with legal
institutions and processes, and are shaped also by socialist
ideology and longstanding cultural norms.
Most workers use legal language to amplify their moral
judgements, underpinned by the norm of subsistence, reciprocity,
and respectful treatment. A smaller group of workers deploy legal
language to condemn illegal practices and call for a proper
implementation of law. However, they also combine their legal
claims with moral ones. These moral claims are shaped by both
values underpinning certain articles of the Labour Code,
longstanding cultural norms, and the socialist value of equality.
The relationship between law and morality becomes fluid when they
complement and intertwine with each other in workers’ appeals.
This thesis makes an original contribution to the study of law
and resistance in post-socialist regimes by suggesting that the
relationship between law and morality is complex and mutually
reinforcing. It sheds light on the different values underpinning
workers’ experiences of (un)fairness, understandings of their
rights, and claims for justice.
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