Combatting Modern Slavery. Genevieve LeBaron

Combatting Modern Slavery - Genevieve LeBaron


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characteristics that can ex ante predict program efficiency’.26 However, these technical and predictive approaches tend to overlook the role of structural power dynamics within the global economy, as well as the broader politics that surround labour governance initiatives, which pose fundamental obstacles to improving these systems.27

      In this book, I take a different approach. After 20 years of CSR, I argue that it is time to confront the reality that industry-led efforts are not neutral and that nudging them towards better performance won’t solve the problems of labour exploitation in the global economy. Corporate actors’ longstanding resistance to transforming labour governance initiatives in light of their well-documented flaws begs us to ask bigger, more political questions. Specifically, I question the interests, power and forms of profitability that are safeguarded and reinforced through CSR approaches to setting and enforcing labour standards. I examine the fundamental governance question surrounding the growing adoption of industry-led labour governance initiatives: that of who these initiatives are effective for. Are current systems designed and equipped to find and resolve labour abuses in supply chains, or are they set up to spur corporate profitability, protect business models, generate reassuring metrics for investors and shareholders and help already massive companies to grow even bigger?

      My aim is to synthesize this body of data to advance an argument about the state of contemporary global labour governance and to stimulate debate about why governance systems are failing to protect the world’s workers. I aim to reflect on the serious but too often not spoken about obstacles that currently limit efforts to eradicate labour exploitation from the global economy – namely, corporate power, interests and ownership structures, and the ways that those affect governments and civil society – and to shift the debate on governance effectiveness from technical considerations to questions of politics. My broad approach, sweeping across a number of case studies, sectors and contexts, has the advantage of allowing me to reflect on the big picture of what’s going wrong with prevailing public and private governance systems to combat labour exploitation, delving into global political economy issues that are frequently overlooked in case studies. This wide-angle approach does have drawbacks: I will no doubt overlook some of the microlevel dynamics of individual initiatives as well as the full extent of variation across geographic contexts, sectors and types of initiative. Yet, a narrower approach would miss too much of the story of global labour governance and the breadth of challenges that need to be overcome to protect twenty-first-century workers.

      Corporations as Cause and Solution to Labour Abuse

      A key contention of the anti-globalization movement was that corporations were causing labour abuse as they laid off workers and outsourced and offshored production activities to supplier firms in the global South. For corporations, one of the great benefits of using supplier firms is that they could set up relatively anonymous sweatshops, shielding brands from the legal and reputational consequences. However, at the same time as brands sought to distance themselves from these abusive labour practices, activist efforts and a raft of journalistic exposés sought to close the gap between consumers and the adults and children sewing their clothes, making their jewellery and assembling their sports equipment in appalling conditions. In 1996, for instance, a photo essay in Life Magazine introduced American consumers to the Pakistani children as young as 10 who were sewing their Nike soccer balls for around US$0.60 per day under ‘horrible conditions’, to use Nike chairman Phil Knight’s own regretful words following the incident.31 The next year, Nike was in the spotlight again when ‘it was revealed that workers in one of its contracted factories in Vietnam were being exposed to toxic fumes at up to 177 times the Vietnamese legal limit’.32


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