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Cover image for: Trading Away Our Rights
Trading Away Our Rights: Women working in global supply chains

SERIES: Oxfam Campaign Reports
Description | Contents | Additional information | Other Languages | 

SERIES: Oxfam Campaign Reports
ISBN-10: 0855985232 
ISBN-13: 9780855985233  STOCK CODE: 00255233
AVAILABILITY: In Print   PUBLISHER: Oxfam
FORMAT: Paperback (pp: 112)   264 x 210mm   PUBLISHED: 29 Feb 2004
READERSHIP:  Postgraduate, Activists and Campaigners, Professional and Practitioners, Undergraduate,
PRICE:  £12.95 (inc. VAT)  

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DESCRIPTION

Globalisation and trade have drawn millions of women in developing countries into paid work. Their labour is contributing to rising global prosperity and the profits of some of the world's most powerful companies. But women workers are systematically being denied their fair share of the benefits from their labour. Failure to address this injustice will perpetuate a model of globalisation that is failing poor people.

This report reveals the double standards at the heart of the corporate practices that are emerging under globalisation. Companies' demands for faster, more flexible, and cheaper production in their supply chains are undermining the very labour standards that they claim to be promoting. Women workers - and their families - pay the price. Many face insecure contracts, intense production pressure, and intimidation in the workplace. Governments, competing to attract investment and boost exports, have too often exacerbated the problem. Instead of strengthening protection for labour rights, they have simply traded them away.




CONTENTS

Summary
Introduction

1. Employed, yes - but precariously
Facing precarious employment
Hidden costs beyond the workplace

2. Squeezed down the supply chain
The rise of global sourcing companies 
Employers' strategies down the chain 
Governments' strategies on labour laws and practices 

3. Clothing the world
Worldwide manufacturers face retailer and brand power 
Hemmed in: pressure down the supply chain
Factory managers: passing it on the workers  

4. Injustices in the fields 
Worldwide growers face supermarket superpowers 
Freshly squeezed: pressure down the supply chain
Farm managers: passing it on to workers  

5. Making trade work for women as workers
Recommendations

Appendix
Notes


OTHER LANGUAGES
Spanish   Spanish (Summary)   German (Summary)   (Summary)   French (Summary)  


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