Voice in supply chains: does the better work program lead to improvements in labor standards compliance?
2020
73
4
August
913-938
labour standard ; labour relations ; multinational enterprise ; value chains ; workers participation ; clothing industry
Law
https://doi.org/10.1177%2F0019793920911905
English
Bibliogr.
"Using a six-year study of Better Work Lesotho (BWL), this article examines whether the ILO's Better Work initiative leads to improvements in labor standards compliance. Data include 55 focus group discussions conducted with 426 workers during four waves of data collection between 2011 and 2017. In-depth qualitative research with workers before, during, and after BWL reveals the root causes underlying noncompliance. Findings indicate that improvements across a number of compliance areas are enabled by collective worker voice mechanisms established by BWL at the factory level. Workers also highlight additional positive impacts of these improvements beyond the workplace. The author concludes that worker voice is essential to long-term sustainable improvements in labor standards compliance. This study makes an empirical and a methodological contribution by demonstrating the importance of worker voice in both the implementation of Better Work and its evaluation and impact."
Digital;Paper
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