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About this book
Monitoring Sweatshops offers the first comprehensive assessment of efforts to address and improve conditions in garment factories. Jill Esbenshade describes the government's efforts to persuade retailers and clothing companies to participate in private monitoring programs. She shows the different approaches to monitoring that firms have taken, and the variety of private monitors employed, from large accounting companies to local non-profits. Esbenshade also shows how the efforts of the anti-sweatshop movement have forced companies to employ monitors overseas as well. When monitoring is understood as the result of the withdrawal of governments from enforcing labor standards as well as the weakening of labor unions, it becomes clear that the United States is experiencing a shift from a social contract between workers, businesses, and government to one that Jill Esbenshade calls the social responsibility contract. She illustrates this by presenting the recent history of monitoring, with considerable attention to the most thorough of the Department of Labor's programs, the one in Los Angeles. Esbenshade also explains the maze of alternative approaches being employed worldwide to decide the questions of what should be monitored and by whom.
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Yes, you can access Monitoring Sweatshops by Jill Esbenshade in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Business & Business General. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.
Information
Publisher
Temple University PressYear
2009Print ISBN
9781592132560, 9781592132553eBook ISBN
9781439900642Table of contents
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: Monitoring, Sweatshops, and Labor Relations
- 1 The Rise and Fall of the Social Contract in the Apparel Industry
- 2 The Social-Accountability Contract
- 3 Private Monitoring in Practice
- 4 Weaknesses and Conflicts in Private Monitoring
- 5 The Development of International Monitoring
- 6 Examining International Codes of Conduct and Monitoring Efforts
- 7 The Struggle for Independent Monitoring
- Conclusion: Workers, Consumers, and Independent Monitoring
- Appendix 1: Confessions of a Sweatshop Monitor
- Appendix 2: Research Methods
- Appendix 3: List of Interviews
- Appendix 4: Acronyms and Abbreviations
- Notes
- References
- Index