Fair Trade, Corporate Accountability and Beyond: Experiments In 'Globalising Justice' (original) (raw)

Corporate accountability through Community and Unions: Linking workers and campaigning to improving working conditions across the supply chain

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ACCOUNTING FOR CORPORATE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY: DOES IT BENEFIT WORKERS ACROSS THE SUPPLY CHAIN?

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Closing the Governance Gap: From CSR to enforceable agreements in the global garment industry

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The labour behind the (Fair Trade) label

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Matthew Anderson, 2015, A History of Fair Trade in Contemporary Britain: From Civil Society Campaigns to Corporate Compliance, Houndsmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire UK, Palgrave Macmillan, 230 p

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Achieving Workers' Rights in the Global Economy

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Campaign strategies to develop regulatory mechanisms: Protecting Australian garment homeworkers

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Transnational labour governance in global supply chains: asking questions and seeking answers on accountability

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Leader or Laggard? Australian Efforts to Promote Better Working Conditions in Supply Chains within and beyond Australia's Borders

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The Limits of Voluntary Governance Programs: Auditing Labor Rights in the Global Apparel Industry

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Promoting workers' rights along global supply chain: the role of private regulations

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Power, Participation, and Private Regulatory Initiatives: Human Rights Under Supply Chain Capitalism (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2021) Edited by Daniel Brinks, Julia Dehm, Karen Engle and Kate Taylor

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Draft of Chapter 1 of Fair Trade, Corporate Accountability and Beyond -Experiments in Globalizing Justice Chapter 1: Social governance in a global economy: introduction to an evolving agenda

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Law, Social Justice & Global Development Labels, Lies and the Law: Opportunities and Challenges in Mainstreaming Fair Trade

vera J

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Veillard P. April 2018. Fair trade Textile and decent work. The impact of fair trade on the sustainability of textile supply chains. Global Context analysis.

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Public accountability within transnational supply chains: a global agenda for empowering Southern workers?

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Labour Standards in the Global Supply Chain: Workers' Agency and Reciprocal Exchange Perspective

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How should we conceive of individual consumer responsibility to address labour injustices

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Anita Chan, “Corporate Accountability and the Potential for Workers’ Representation in China,” in Kate Macdonald, ed., Fair Trade, Corporate Accountability and Beyond: Experiments in ‘Global Justice’ (Aldershot: Ashgate, 2010), pp. 213-224

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Monitoring Human Rights in Global Supply Chains: insights and policy recommendations for civil society, global brands and academics

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Draft of Chapter 20 of Fair Trade, Corporate Accountability and Beyond -Experiments in Globalizing Justice Experiments in globalizing justice: emergent lessons and future trajectories

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Situating Human Rights Approaches to Corporate Accountability in the Political Economy of Supply Chain Capitalism

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Power to the People? Private Regulatory Initiatives, Human Rights and Supply Chain Capitalism (D. Brinks, J. Dehm & K. Engle, eds) (Penn Press), 2020

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Defeating capitalism by its own means: How fair trade activists challenged global inequality through certification

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Corporate Social Responsibility in the Garment Industry: A Cross-case analysis of three Norwegian organizations’ approach to central challenges in improving working conditions for factory workers in developing countries

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Supporting workers to speak up: Exposing labour exploitation in supply chains

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CSR Participation Committees, Wildcat Strikes and the Sourcing Squeeze in Global Supply Chains

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Transnational Labour Campaigns: Can the Logic of the Market Be Turned Against Itself?

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Steering CSR Through Home State Regulation: A Comparison of the Impact of the UK Bribery Act and Modern Slavery Act on Global Supply Chain Governance

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Do Voluntary Labour Initiatives Make a Difference for the Conditions of Workers in Global Supply Chains?

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