Protecting labour rights in a multi-polar supply chain and mobile global economy
Blanpain, Roger ; Wouters, Jan ; Rayp, Glenn ; Beke, Laura ; Marx, Axel
Aspen Publishers - New York
2014
XIV, 194 p.
corporate social responsibility ; EU policy ; forced labour ; globalization ; ILO Convention ; labour law ; labour standard ; migrant worker ; recruitment ; role of ILO ; outsourcing ; trade ; trade agreement ; trade policy ; women workers ; workers rights
Brazil ; China ; EU countries ; USA ; Dominican Republic
Bulletin of Comparative Labour Relations
89
Law
English
Bibliogr.
978-9041156624
04.01-64845
"In this important volume, nine studies identify the complexities of protecting labour rights in a mobile global economy by assessing the role of ILO standards, as well as public, private, and public-private initiatives, in countering the potentially negative impact of international trade and investment flows on labour rights. The editor's powerfully summative introduction and conclusion pinpoint the crucial issues confronting labour law in this context, highlighting the need for policy coordination and coherence. Among the topics and issues raised in the book are the following:
empirical studies of migrant workers employed in global supply chains;
international recruitment intermediaries;
governance through hierarchy versus governance through networks;
trade sustainable impact assessments (SIAs);
the so-called governance triangle – the state, companies, and non-governmental organizations (NGOs);
corporate social responsibility (CSR) initiatives; and
the OECD's national contact points (NCPs).
Various authors focus on such features as the difficulties of monitoring labour conditions in a supply-chain system, the multiple forms of disadvantage often faced by supply-chain workers, enforcement and jurisdictional roadblocks, and pitfalls caused by prioritizing quantitative modelling at the expense of qualitative analysis. Authors and editors both offer recommendations on ways to not only hold multinationals responsible for the negative externalities of their actions but also provide building blocks for"
Paper
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