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The Manufacturing of Job Displacement


Laura López-SandersThe Manufacturing of Job Displacement is an ethnographic study examining how racial capitalism shapes labour inequality in a company based in South Carolina, US. Though limited by its single case study, the book deftly exposes how employers exploit vulnerabilities of race, immigration status and gender to disempower workers and maximise profit, writes Shubham Kumar.

The Manufacturing of Job Displacement: How Racial Capitalism Drives Immigrant and Gender Inequality in the Labor Market. Laura López-Sanders. NYU Press. 2024.


The Manufacturing of Job DisplacementThe gendered and racialised dynamics of job displacement in the United States reveal a stark reality: the labour market is not a neutral space, but one deeply shaped by power structures that exploit race, gender, and immigration status. The systemic nature of displacement – particularly for Black workers and immigrant labour – becomes evident when we consider how economic shifts and employer practices intersect with these identities to perpetuate inequality. The Manufacturing of Job Displacement by Laura López-Sanders is a remarkable piece of ethnographic analysis of the dynamics of the labour market in the United States in which racial capitalism creates, manufactures, and utilises inequalities. Drawing from a site-specific study of HiCap, a manufacturing company in South Carolina, this book elucidates the ways that employers dispossess Black workers, replace them with immigrant labour, and preserve racialised regimes of exploitation. López-Sanders’ fieldwork examined the intersectional vulnerabilities of race, immigration status, and gender within the context of labour. Specifically, she conducted interviews with both employees and employers, allowing her to explore how economic systems are shaped by these interconnected factors. 

The book critically dissects simplistic explanations of labour market transitions, including the narrative that portrays immigrant labour as a natural response to economic demand. López-Sanders challenges this view, arguing that job displacement is an intentional process designed to increase employer control and profit, often framed as a result of market forces. This analysis is embedded within the framework of racial capitalism, offering a sharp critique of the structures that perpetuate labour precarity, racialised employment practices, and economic inequality. In a complementary fashion, works by François Bourguignon and Verity Burgmann broaden this understanding by exploring how globalisation, economic restructuring, and systemic inequalities shape labour dynamics. These sources deepen López-Sanders’ argument, emphasising that labour migration is not an inevitable market response but rather the product of intersecting power structures, policy decisions, race, immigration status, and gender, all of which are critical to understanding the construction of modern labour markets. 

Racial Capitalism and Labour Precarity 

One of the most potent aspects of López-Sanders’ scholarship is her application of Cedric Robinson’s theory of racial capitalism to the labour market. In his seminal work Black Marxism: The Making of the Black Radical Tradition, Robinson argues that the economy is fundamentally structured to exploit and profit from racial hierarchies. López-Sanders extends this framework by examining how racial capitalism is constructed and operationalised in specific labour sites, such as HiCap, where it serves to perpetuate precarity and maximise employer control. Through this lens, she reveals how racialised labour practices are deeply embedded within broader economic systems, providing a profound critique of how racial capitalism shapes contemporary employment dynamics. In particular, the systematic replacement of Black workers with undocumented Latino immigrants within the company illustrates how employers exploit vulnerabilities of immigration status, race, and gender to reduce costs and circumvent resistance to labour exploitation. 

The author introduces the concept of “racialised displacement,” a process that goes beyond natural labour turnover. Employers actively create vacancies by pushing workers out through heightened surveillance, unrealistic productivity demands, and discriminatory practices. HiCap’s preference for Latino workers, deemed more compliant and exploitable, illustrates how displacement reshapes the labour force to align with managerial objectives. López-Sanders also emphasizes the distinction between “good papers” and “bad papers,” revealing how employers favour Latino workers with forged documents over Black and white workers, equating ethnicity with legal status. This practice commodifies immigrant labour, underscoring the racialization of exploitation and employers’ control strategies. 

The Role of Subcontractors and Intermediaries  

Her emphasis on labour intermediaries, such as temporary employment agencies and bilingual supervisors, who act as pivotal players in the displacement process, is an important and novel feature of López-Sanders’ analysis. Intermediaries such as the temporary staffing company Ready Hands served as a buffer between HiCap and its employees. Through this agreement, HiCap was able to evade anti-discrimination laws and employ hiring practices that routinely turned away Black candidates in favour of undocumented Latino immigrants.  

Additionally, intermediaries were essential to maintaining a fractured workplace. Intermediaries shattered any possibility of class solidarity by separating employees from their employers. It was the responsibility of bilingual supervisors to ensure compliance, train immigrant workers, and enforce managerial directives. López-Sanders reveals the complex dynamic created by their dual roles as exploitation enforcers and members of the displaced communities, which rarefies accountability and shields employers from it in addition to overt employer practices. 

Worker Resistance and Contingency 

As well as focusing on employers, López-Sanders offers a detailed examination of worker resistance. In Chapter Four, she explores how displaced workers – particularly Black workers and undocumented Latino immigrants – use their agency to resist displacement. These workers engage in tactics such as “doing gender” and “doing race” to actively challenge their roles as passive victims of exploitation. “Doing gender” refers to the performative ways in which individuals enact gender norms, while “doing race” involves the ways racial identities are constructed and expressed in response to social and institutional pressures. By utilising these strategies, workers assert their agency, resist gendered and racialised power structures, and fight back against efforts to marginalise them.  

The book’s analysis gains depth from this examination of resistance. López-Sanders complicates the story of vulnerability and draws attention to the interaction between agency and structural limitations by portraying workers as active participants rather than passive victims. This analysis also raises important concerns around the boundaries of managerial authority and the possibility of unity in racially and economically divided workplaces. 

Broader Implications for Labour Market Inequality  

López-Sanders places her case study in the larger framework of immigration policy and labour market inequality. She challenges prevailing narratives that portray immigrants as job rivals, contending that these narratives fail to recognise the structural factors causing displacement. The book moves the emphasis from criticising immigrant workers to analysing the systemic exploitation at the core of labour market inequality by emphasising the role of employers and middlemen. 

The analysis also examines the impact of anti-immigrant measures such as workplace raids and the E-Verify system on labour markets. While these policies are intended to reduce illegal employment, they often exacerbate labour precarity by driving immigrant workers further into the shadows. By considering these policies under racial capitalism, López-Sanders illustrates how employer strategies and state actions converge to sustain inequality, exploiting the fear and precarious status of immigrant labourers. 

Broadening the scope 

López-Sanders’ book is a significant contribution to labour studies, offering a theoretically rigorous and ethnographically rich analysis of displacement under racial capitalism. It excels in linking larger scholarly debates to the everyday practices that perpetuate inequality. However, its exclusive focus on a single case study raises questions about the generalisability of its findings. The reliance on ethnography, while insightful, overlooks broader structural factors like macroeconomic trends and policy shifts. Anecdotal evidence, though illustrative, sometimes lacks the nuance needed to fully capture complex processes. A comparative approach and integration of qualitative and quantitative methods could have enhanced the analysis and broadened its applicability. 

A call to action 

For academics, decision-makers, and activists interested in the relationships between race, labour, and capitalism, The Manufacturing of Job Displacement is a timely, crucial resource. Together with her insightful theoretical analysis, López-Sanders’ ethnographic depth forces us to reconsider our understanding of labour market inequality and the part employers play in manufacturing displacement. López-Sanders provides a potent critique of the systems that uphold inequality in modern labour markets by revealing the mechanisms of displacement and placing them within the context of racial capitalism. She presents us with a call to action as much as a scholarly work, challenging us to consider new avenues for workplace justice and solidarity and to address the structural factors that contribute to racial inequality and labour precarity. 


Note: This review gives the views of the author and not the position of the LSE Review of Books blog, nor of the London School of Economics and Political Science.

Image: Unai Huizi Photography on Shutterstock.

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