Abstract
Transnational corporations appropriate 'carrying capacity" for the core by transferring the core's hazardous products, production processes, and wastes to the peripheral countries of the world-system. An increasingly important form of this reproduction process is the transfer of core-based hazardous industries to export processing zones (EPZs) locatedin a number of peripheral countries in Africa, Asia, and Latin America and the Caribbean. A specific case is examined in this paper: the transfer of hazardous industries to the maquiladora centers located on the Mexican side of the Mexico-U.S. border. Maquiladoras provide an excellent case for examining what is known about the causes, adverse consequences, and political responses associated with the transfer of core-based hazardous production processes to the EPZs of the periphery.
Highlights
A specific case is examined in this paper: the transfer of hazardous industries to the maquiladoracenters located on the Mexican side of the Mexico-U.S border
Some of the cores hazardous products, production processes, and wastes are transferred to the peripheral zones of the world-system by transnational corporations (TNCs). 1 Since few peripheral countries have the ability to adequately assess and manage the risks associated with such hazards, TNC export practices are increasing the health, safety, and environmental risks facing many peripheral conntries
I provide a provisional mapping of the general contours of the problem by examining what is known about a specific case: the transfer of hazardous industries to the maquiladoracenters located on the Mexican side of the MexicoU.S. border
Summary
A specific case is examined in this paper: the transfer of hazardous industries to the maquiladoracenters located on the Mexican side of the Mexico-U.S border.
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