12 resultados para Sweatshops.


Relevância:

10.00% 10.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

The increase of buyer-driven supply chains, outsourcing and other forms of non-traditional employment has resulted in challenges for labour market regulation. One business model which has created substantial regulatory challenges is supply chains. The supply chain model involves retailers purchasing products from brand corporations who then outsource the manufacturing of the work to traders who contract with factories or outworkers who actually manufacture the clothing and textiles. This business model results in time and cost pressures being pushed down the supply chain which has resulted in sweatshops where workers systematically have their labour rights violated. Literally millions of workers work in dangerous workplaces where thousands are killed or permanently disabled every year. This thesis has analysed possible regulatory responses to provide workers a right to safety and health in supply chains which provide products for Australian retailers. This thesis will use a human rights standard to determine whether Australia is discharging its human rights obligations in its approach to combating domestic and foreign labour abuses. It is beyond this thesis to analyse Occupational Health and Safety (OHS) laws in every jurisdiction. Accordingly, this thesis will focus upon Australian domestic laws and laws in one of Australia’s major trading partners, the Peoples’ Republic of China (China). It is hypothesised that Australia is currently breaching its human rights obligations through failing to adequately regulate employees’ safety at work in Australian-based supply chains. To prove this hypothesis, this thesis will adopt a three- phase approach to analysing Australia’s regulatory responses. Phase 1 will identify the standard by which Australia’s regulatory approach to employees’ health and safety in supply chains can be judged. This phase will focus on analysing how workers’ rights to safety as a human right imposes a moral obligation on Australia to take reasonablely practicable steps regulate Australian-based supply chains. This will form a human rights standard against which Australia’s conduct can be judged. Phase 2 focuses upon the current regulatory environment. If existing regulatory vehicles adequately protect the health and safety of employees, then Australia will have discharged its obligations through simply maintaining the status quo. Australia currently regulates OHS through a combination of ‘hard law’ and ‘soft law’ regulatory vehicles. The first part of phase 2 analyses the effectiveness of traditional OHS laws in Australia and in China. The final part of phase 2 then analyses the effectiveness of the major soft law vehicle ‘Corporate Social Responsibility’ (CSR). The fact that employees are working in unsafe working conditions does not mean Australia is breaching its human rights obligations. Australia is only required to take reasonably practicable steps to ensure human rights are realized. Phase 3 identifies four regulatory vehicles to determine whether they would assist Australia in discharging its human rights obligations. Phase 3 then analyses whether Australia could unilaterally introduce supply chain regulation to regulate domestic and extraterritorial supply chains. Phase 3 also analyses three public international law regulatory vehicles. This chapter considers the ability of the United Nations Global Compact, the ILO’s Better Factory Project and a bilateral agreement to improve the detection and enforcement of workers’ right to safety and health.

Relevância:

10.00% 10.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

These records document New York Section’s early history to the present, representing a significant portion of its work in community programming and advocacy, as well as its supporting administrative, fundraising, membership, and public relations activities. As a section of the National Council, its records also include a substantial amount of material regarding the National Organization’s programs, events, publications, and reports, dating from 1896 through 1999.

Relevância:

10.00% 10.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

A migração laboral de bolivianos para São Paulo é um processo intrinsecamente relacionado aos planos de ajuste estrutural ocorridos na Bolívia e no Brasil na segunda metade dos anos 1980 e no início da década de 1990, respectivamente. Para a Bolívia, o Decreto 21.060 implicou a privatização de mineradoras e conseqüentes demissões em massa, além de uma abertura econômica que favoreceu migrações internas para as regiões cocaleiras e para as periferias das grandes cidades. Posteriormente, esses migrantes e seus familiares se destinaram a países limítrofes como Argentina e Brasil. Destaca-se nesse contexto a localidade de El Alto, origem de grande parte dos imigrantes que se destinaram a São Paulo. Do lado brasileiro, houve também uma abertura econômica que foi prejudicial a amplos setores da indústria, como a cadeia têxtil-vestuário. Para reduzir os custos de produção e aumentar sua competitividade em relação às mercadorias asiáticas, a indústria de vestuário se reestruturou defensivamente e subcontratou grande parte de sua produção material às oficinas informais que empregam imigrantes bolivianos geralmente jovens, indocumentados e com baixa qualificação profissional. Nessa pesquisa, relacionamos esse fluxo populacional às transformações estruturais ocorridas nos dois países, destacando as mudanças nas relações de trabalho decorrentes do processo de reestruturação produtiva. Também abordamos as redes de solidariedade desses imigrantes e os meios pelos quais estes vêm revertendo uma inserção na sociedade de destino em que predominam condições precárias de trabalho e habitação, além de uma instabilidade permanente decorrente da irregularidade documental que atinge grande parte desses trabalhadores.

Relevância:

10.00% 10.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Ce mémoire explore des façons de conceptualiser la responsabilité dans des cas où des individus contribuent de façon peu significative à des torts collectifs éloignés. Pour contextualiser la discussion, la relation entre des actes de consommation et la perpétuation des « sweatshops » dans l’industrie des textiles et des chaussures est utilisée. Une approche basée sur les droits humains est déployée pour définir le tort qui est présent dans les usines de textiles et une conceptualisation de la connection est proposée selon la notion de la structure sociale. Guidé par la notion de « unstructured collective harms » proposée par Christopher Kutz, et en comparaison avec des notions de responsabilité qui mettent la responsabilité nationale en premier plan, les conclusions qui sont offertes ici sont centrées sur l’importance de la confrontation du consommateur pour remédier aux effets du problème d’action collective qui est au coeur de la création des torts collectifs lointains. Finalement, l’importance du cosmopolitanisme comme une façon de stabiliser des théories de responsabilité à travers les frontières est mis en évidence.

Relevância:

10.00% 10.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Sweatshop labour is sometimes defended from critics by arguments that stress the voluntariness of the worker’s choice, and the fact that sweatshops provide a source of income where no other similar source exists. The idea is if it is exploitation—as their opponents charge—it is mutually beneficial and consensual exploitation. This defence appeals to the non-worseness claim (NWC), which says that if exploitation is better for the exploited party than neglect, it cannot be seriously wrong. The NWC renders otherwise exploitative—and therefore morally wrong—transactions permissible, making the exploitation of the global poor a justifiable path to development. In this paper, I argue that the use of NWC for the case of sweatshops is misleading. After reviewing and strengthening the exploitation claims made concerning sweatshops, most importantly by refuting certain allegations that a micro-unfairness account of exploitation cannot evaluate sweatshop labour as exploitative, I then argue that even if this practice may seem permissible due to benefits otherwise unavailable to the global poor, there remains a duty to address the background conditions that make this form of wrong-doing possible, which the NWC cannot accommodate. I argue that the NWC denies this by unreasonably limiting its scope and is therefore incomplete, and ultimately unconvincing.

Relevância:

10.00% 10.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

En este artículo se analiza el resurgimiento de talleres de costura clandestinos en grandes ciudades del centro y la periferia mundial, para entender los cambios dados en la industria de la moda durante las últimas cuatro décadas y sus consecuencias sobre los trabajadores. Para ello se realizaron dos estudios de caso: uno en la ciudad de Buenos Aires y otro en la provincia de Prato (Italia). Los resultados de esta investigación demuestran que este sector fue pionero en los procesos de reorganización industrial en la época neoliberal. En ambos estudios de caso, el cierre de fábricas y la utilización masiva de subcontratación a talleres urbanos informales tuvieron como consecuencias una significativa concentración de capital por un lado, y un marcado deterioro de las condiciones de trabajo por el otro. De hecho, la existencia de trata de personas y reducción a la servidumbre de miles de trabajadores inmigrantes es fundamental para el funcionamiento de esta industria

Relevância:

10.00% 10.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

En este artículo se analiza el resurgimiento de talleres de costura clandestinos en grandes ciudades del centro y la periferia mundial, para entender los cambios dados en la industria de la moda durante las últimas cuatro décadas y sus consecuencias sobre los trabajadores. Para ello se realizaron dos estudios de caso: uno en la ciudad de Buenos Aires y otro en la provincia de Prato (Italia). Los resultados de esta investigación demuestran que este sector fue pionero en los procesos de reorganización industrial en la época neoliberal. En ambos estudios de caso, el cierre de fábricas y la utilización masiva de subcontratación a talleres urbanos informales tuvieron como consecuencias una significativa concentración de capital por un lado, y un marcado deterioro de las condiciones de trabajo por el otro. De hecho, la existencia de trata de personas y reducción a la servidumbre de miles de trabajadores inmigrantes es fundamental para el funcionamiento de esta industria

Relevância:

10.00% 10.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

En este artículo se analiza el resurgimiento de talleres de costura clandestinos en grandes ciudades del centro y la periferia mundial, para entender los cambios dados en la industria de la moda durante las últimas cuatro décadas y sus consecuencias sobre los trabajadores. Para ello se realizaron dos estudios de caso: uno en la ciudad de Buenos Aires y otro en la provincia de Prato (Italia). Los resultados de esta investigación demuestran que este sector fue pionero en los procesos de reorganización industrial en la época neoliberal. En ambos estudios de caso, el cierre de fábricas y la utilización masiva de subcontratación a talleres urbanos informales tuvieron como consecuencias una significativa concentración de capital por un lado, y un marcado deterioro de las condiciones de trabajo por el otro. De hecho, la existencia de trata de personas y reducción a la servidumbre de miles de trabajadores inmigrantes es fundamental para el funcionamiento de esta industria

Relevância:

10.00% 10.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Thesis (doctoral)--Université de Nancy, 1911.

Relevância:

10.00% 10.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Mode of access: Internet.