Structures of Injustice, the Law, and Exploitative Work

Structural Injustice, McKeown and Browne (eds), 2022 Forthcoming

Faculty of Laws University College London Law Research Paper No. 2/2022

15 Pages Posted: 31 Jan 2022 Last revised: 12 May 2022

See all articles by Virginia Mantouvalou

Virginia Mantouvalou

University College London - Faculty of Laws

Date Written: January 24, 2022

Abstract

In this chapter, I examine structures of injustice at work and assess the role of the state in creating vulnerability to exploitation through concrete and identifiable legal rules. In so doing, I build on the work of Iris Marion Young. When analysing the fictional story of Sandy as a typical story of structural injustice, Young said that no individual or state action can be identified as the major cause of her predicament. In my chapter, I scrutinise the role of the state by presenting the (real) story of Marcell who was trapped in exploitative working arrangements and in-work poverty (McBride, Smith and Mbala, “‘You End Up with Nothing’: The Experience of Being a Statistic of “In-Work Poverty” in the UK’, (2018) 32 Work, Employment and Society 210). Even though Marcell’s story appears to be very similar to the story of Sandy, when we look at it more closely we can identify what I call ‘state-mediated structures of injustice’ at work, namely concrete legal rules that are prima facie legitimate but which increase workers’ vulnerability that is systematically exploited by private actors. I argue that the state is responsible for these laws that create vulnerability and are connected to structures of exploitation. My ultimate aim is to assess on the basis of this framework in what circumstances the state may have legal responsibility arising from human rights law to change the rules and destabilise the unjust structures in question.

Keywords: structural injustice, Young, responsibility, exploitation, human rights, welfare conditionality, precarious work

Suggested Citation

Mantouvalou, Virginia, Structures of Injustice, the Law, and Exploitative Work (January 24, 2022). Structural Injustice, McKeown and Browne (eds), 2022 Forthcoming, Faculty of Laws University College London Law Research Paper No. 2/2022, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4016793 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.4016793

Virginia Mantouvalou (Contact Author)

University College London - Faculty of Laws ( email )

Bentham House
4-8 Endsleigh Gardens
London, WC1E OEG
United Kingdom

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