Publications
Here you can find a selection of English
language publications by CCCs, platform members,
and our partners and in some cases translations.
Some give examples of garment workers' experiences,
others set out the details of companies' policy
and practice.
July 31, 2008
Key Feminist Concerns Regarding Core Labour Standards
Anja K. Franck, WIDE Network
Decent Work and Corporation Social Responsibility
The Karat Coalition through its membership of WIDE presents this new report. This publication provides a feminist analysis of workers´ rights issues in respect of core labor standards, the decent work paradigm and Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) in relation to trade policy, especially that of the European Union (EU).
Available HERE.
Sept. 2008
Who pays for our clothing from
Lidl and Kik?
CCC - Germany
Labour force at a discount price. A good deal for all?
Globalisation and discounting are closely related.
About 90 percent of our clothing is produced in
Asia, Central America, Eastern Europe and several
countries in Africa. The majority of retailing
companies, such as also the discounters Lidl and
KiK, buy from these countries. The "Alternative
Movement for Resources and Freedom Society"
(AMRF) examined the buying practices of discounters
and the working conditions in six selected suppliers
of Lidl and KiK in Bangladesh. The results - massive
violations of labour and human rights - are presented
in this brochure.
Available HERE.
Sept. 2008
The Structural Crisis of Labour Flexibility.
CCC
Strategies and Prospects for Transnational Labour Organising in the Garment and Sportswear Industries
The Clean Clothes Campaign (CCC) was launched over 15 years ago. Much has been achieved in this period with regard to awareness raising, network building and a growing group of transnational corporations that recognise their responsibility for the (substandard) working conditions in facilities they do not directly own. At the same time, everyone active in the field knows that working conditions in the garment and athletic footwear industries have in general not improved. The CCC continues to receive reports of worker's rights violations on an almost daily basis.
Read more >>
Aug 2007
Full Package Approach to Labour
Codes of Conduct Clean Clothes Campaign
Four
major steps companies can take to ensure their products
are made under humane conditions
Sweatshop abuses are a systemic problem - there
are no companies that are totally clean or totally
dirty. Every company that sources globally faces
problems that need to be addressed. While there
are many steps companies can and should take (and
to a certain extent have already taken) to improve
workers rights, there are no quick-fix solutions.
In this guide the Clean Clothes Campaign offers
guidelines on what companies can do to better
assess, implement, and verify compliance with
labour standards in their supply chains, and eliminate
abuses where and when they arise.
Read more >>
Aug 2007
Aldi's clothing bargains -discount
buys discounting standards? Suedwind
Working
conditions in Aldi's suppliers in China and Indonesia:
Suggestions for consumer and trade union action.
The largest German and European discounter, Aldi,
is selling its clothing bargains at a high price:
in its study, the SÜDWIND Institute provides
evidence of unprecedented violations of labour
laws in Chinese and Indonesian factories which
supply Aldi. Almost completely unnoticed in the
public domain, discounters have taken over the
top positions in Germany's textile and clothing
retailing in recent years. Part of the basic concept
of discounters is the drastic savings in personnel
costs - both in German branches and in supplier
factories throughout the world. The 96 page study
ends with a number of suggestions for consumer
and trade unions action.
Available at: www.suedwind-institut.de/downloads/ALDI-publ_engl_2007-08.pdf
Aug. 2008
Field research in two Romanian work wear producing companies
CCC
The document Implementing the codes of conduct: a real challenge for the Romanian Garment Industry Case Study - field research in 2 Romanian work wear producing companies. This 66 page long paper provides detailed information on the Romanian labour law in relation to the core ILO labour standards, the state of the Romanian garment industry post-MFA, the results of the field research carried out at two workwear factories, and a number of suggestions on how to improve working conditions as well as to improve social dialogue between the different stakeholders.
Available at: http://www.cleanclothes.org/ftp/08-08-26_eng_ROMANIAN_STUDY.pdf
Sept. 2007
Expectations in relation to Factory
Closures and Mass-Dismissals
CCC
The aim of this CCC E-Bulletin is to define the
issues at stake to prevent closures. Secondly
this bulletin looks into the issues at stake when
garment factories close or significantly reduce
their production and therefore drastically reduce
the number of employees. This bulletin also seeks
to provide an overview of the existing regulations
and agreements regarding closure and workers'
rights in the international labour rights context.
The emphasis of this bulletin is on the role of
the brand name companies and retailers that find
themselves at the top of the supply chain.
Available at: http://www.cleanclothes.org/ftp/07-09_CCC_
E-bulletin_Closures_and_Mass_dismissals.pdf
Aug 2007
Decent Work: The Cambodian Garment
Industry
Solidair
This report is based on research undertaken with
garment workers in 2006. It asks whether or not
the development of the garment industry in Cambodia
has led to the creation of decent work. It also
identifies what measures can be taken to ensure
that the industry is not built on undermining
labour rights and the principles of decent work
- employment creation, equality between men and
women, social dialogue, rights at work and social
protection. Overall the research found that the
emergence of a rapidly developing textile industry
over the past decade has provided thousands of
poor Cambodian women with much needed work and
enabled them to send money back to their families
in the countryside. However, although improvements
have clearly been made, in many cases the industry
is still failing to provide decent work as defined
by the International Labour Organisation (ILO)
and its role in future poverty alleviation is
unclear.
The report is available at: http://www.oneworldaction.org/_uploads/documents/Decentwork.pdf
May 2007
Labor Monitoring In Cambodia's
Garment Industry: Lession for Africa
Realizing Rights: The Ethical Globalization Initiative
has publised a paper on the advances and setbacks
in labor monitoring in Cambodia. It is based on
research undertaken in the field, and identifies
lessons that can be applied to the garment industry
in Africa and other regions. In a broader context,
the paper draws attention to development paradigms
that can undermine workers' rights, and the recent
attempts to
use improved labor standards as a competitive
advantage in international trade. The paper highlights
the need for greater international collaboration
in this area.
Available at: http://www.realizingrights.org/pdf/Labor_Monitoring
_in_the_Garment_Industry_May2007_A_Marston.pdf
2007
Organising Ethical Trade: a UK-US
Comparison
Martin Buttle, Alex Hughes
and Neil Wighley
This (acadamic) report aims to evaluate the different
ways in which ethical trade is approached and
organised by leading food and clothing retailers
in the UK and USA. It investigates the ways in
which corporate approaches to ethical trade have
developed in contrasting ways in the UK and USA.
Among other things, the paper identifies differences
in: the sectors engaged in ethical trade, the
models adopted by multi-stakeholder initiatives,
the emphasis placed on transparency and legal
compliance by stakeholders, and the ways in which
new approaches to ethical trade have developed.
Available at:www.cleanclothes.org/ftp/07-ESRCStakeholderReport.pdf
May 2007
Women Migrant Workers under the
Chinese Social Apartheid
This report by Committee for Asian Women (CAW)
aims at identifying how the combined results of
the one-party state and the capitalist reforms
since the 1990's has deeply affected women rural
migrant workers, and how these women workers have
responded to these changes. The report further
identifies seven elements of the repressive regime
at the national, municipal and local levels, and
argue that the combined results of these elements
have given rise to a kind of spatial and social
apartheid which systematically discriminates against
the rural population, with women being the most
oppressed. One of the case studies discusses the
Stella struggle.
Available at: http://www.cawinfo.org/pdf/final_10.pdf
March 2007
Undue influence: corporations
gain ground in battle over China's new labor law
- but human rights and labor advocates are pushing
back
Global Labor Strategies has produced a paper
concerning the behind-the-scenes battle that is
raging over reforms in China's labour law. U.S.-based
and other global corporations have been aggressively
lobbying the Chinese government to weaken or abandon
significant pro-worker reforms it had proposed
in March 2006. In opposition are pro-worker rights
forces in China, backed by labour, human rights,
and political forces in the U.S. and around the
world. Corporate lobbying has already resulted
in a weakening of the proposed new law. However,
US corporate groups have launched an unpublicised
new attack demanding further amendment. The authors
see the current focus on the role of global corporations
in China as evidence of a "new paradigm"
for analysing current forms of globalisation.
Increasingly, they argue, the debate is not about
free trade versus protectionism, but about the
activities of a global "sweatshop lobby",
which is deliberately shaping labour law and labour
markets around the world.
Available at:
http://www.eldis.org/cf/rdr/rdr.cfm?doc=DOC24154&em=260407&sub=csr
June 2007
Emergency Assistance, Redress
and Prevention in the Hermosa Manufacturing Case
The closure of the Hermosa Manufacturing facility
in El Salvador in May 2005 left former Hermosa
workers without jobs, without back wages, without
severance pay, without health insurance and without
employee pensions. Workers have lost their homes,
their health, and many - in particular those who
had organized a union at the factory - remain
unemployed to this day. Based on interviews with
FLA Participating Companies, staff and NGO members,
other companies that had sourced from the Hermosa
factory in El Salvador, and the various international
and Salvadoran stakeholders in this case, this
Maquila Solidarity Network provides an interesting
evaluation and gives good analysis of what happens
when campaigning on issues related to severance,
closures, blacklisting and a number of other issues
that were succesfully highlighted as part of the
Hermosa appeal. It provides a good insight into
the debates around creating funds, the role of
the state vs the role of the brands and different
positions from unions vs ngos.
Available at: http://en.maquilasolidarity.org/sites/
maquilasolidarity.org/files/HermosaReportFinal_1.pdf