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Nike's law: the anti-sweatshop movement, transnational corporations, and the struggle over international labor rights in the Americas

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Abstract:

Just as sweatshops have become the symbol of the perverse effects of neoliberal globalization, the transnational anti-sweatshop movement lies at the heart of the struggle for social justice in the global economy. In the global North, the reemergence of sweatshops in such cities as New York and Los Angeles entails the return of the economic and legal realities of the nineteenth century (Bonacich and Appelbaum 2000; Ross 1997). In the South, the exploitative labor conditions and the unfulfilled promise of employment and growth have turned maquilas into an icon of the failure of late twentieth-century neoliberalism. In bridging the North–South divide through highly plural, dynamic, and decentralized transnational advocacy networks (TANs), the anti-sweatshop movement holds out the prospect of a revamped, twenty-first century labor internationalism (Evans, forthcoming; Moody 1997).

Tópico:

Global trade, sustainability, and social impact

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Citations: 25
25

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Información de la Fuente:

FuenteCambridge University Press eBooks
Cuartil año de publicaciónNo disponible
VolumenNo disponible
IssueNo disponible
Páginas64 - 91
pISSNNo disponible
ISSNNo disponible

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