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Searching with a thematic focus on Corporate Social Responsibility, Health
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Balancing sweatshop ethics and economics
University of Wisconsin-Madison, School of Business, 1999The referenced paper is one of the first to attempt to use ethics in order to provide guidelines for the labor activities of international commercial organizations.DocumentDare to lead: public health and company wealth
Oxfam, 2001This is the first in a series of briefing papers analysing the human development impact of transnational corporations (TNCs).DocumentChild labour: targeting the intolerable
International Programme on the Elimination of Child Labour, 1998Drawing on ILO action against child labour, including the experience of the ILO's International Programme on the Elimination of Child Labour (IPEC at a glance ) and other initiatives, this report chronicles the exploitation and abuse of working children, surveys international and national law and practice, and points the way toward effective practical action to remove children from debt bondage, pDocumentSpilling the Beans: What's wrong with the coffee trade?
Fairtrade Foundation, 1998Highlights the problems facing coffee farmers as a result of the way we trade in coffee. After examining how the trade operates, the report illustrates with testimonies its impact on the lives of farmers.DocumentEthical trade and export horticulture in sub-Saharan Africa: The development of tools for ethical trading of horticultural exports by resource poor groups
Ethical Trade and Natural Resources Programme, NRI, 1998Short report covering: the role of export horticulture in sub-Saharan Africa and its variable impact on the resource-poor; moves towards ethical trade in export horticulture, focusing on limitations of current approaches; a research agenda for developing appropriate criteria for ethical trade in horticultural products [author]DocumentA Sporting Chance: Tackling child labour in India's sports goods industry
Christian Aid, 1998Research by Christian Aid and the South Asian Coalition on Child Servitude (SACCS) has found that Indian children - some as young as seven - are routinely stitching footballs for export to Britain. Boys as young as ten were also found to be employed in small workshops manufacturing items such as boxing and cricket gloves for export.Pages
