No Sweat

Paperback
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Author: Andrew Ross

ISBN-10: 1859841724

ISBN-13: 9781859841723

Category: International Economics

A hard-hitting expose of the fashion world you don't see on the catwalk. Are youaware that the T-shirt or the running shoes you are wearing may have been produced by children as young as 13 years old, working 14-hour days for 30 cents an hour? Don't be reassured by a label that claims the item was manufactured in the USA or Europe. It could have been sewn in Haiti or Indonesia -- or in a domestic sweatshop where conditions rival those in the Third World. The label may tell you how to treat...

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A hard-hitting expose of the fashion world you don't see on the catwalk. Are youaware that the T-shirt or the running shoes you are wearing may have been produced by children as young as 13 years old, working 14-hour days for 30 cents an hour? Don't be reassured by a label that claims the item was manufactured in the USA or Europe. It could have been sewn in Haiti or Indonesia -- or in a domestic sweatshop where conditions rival those in the Third World. The label may tell you how to treat the garment, but it says nothing of how the worker who made it was treated. To find out about that you need to read this book. No Sweat shows you: * How Nike's celebrity spokeman Michael Jordan earned more for endorsing Nike running shoes that then company's 200,000-strong Asian workforce get between them in a year. * How Disney boss Michael Eisner's annual pay and stock options, worth $200 million, are partly paid for out of profits from the sale of Pocahontas and Hunchback of Notre Dame T-shirts made by Haitian teenagers who work for less than $10 per week and are force-fed contraceptive pills. * How campaigning by the New York-based Netional Labor Committee, the American workers' union UNITE and US Secretary of Labor Robert Reich has forced embarrasing climb-downs by companies like GAP and Wal-Mart caught using sweated labor. * How the European-based Clean Clothes Campaign has linked up with charities such as Oxfam to raise the issue of codes of conduct with manufacturers and retailers in the UK, the Netherlands, Belgium, Germany and France. * How you can join the growing global campaign of consumer groups, human rights activists and international labororganizations to close down the sweatshops and guarantee basic rights for those who cut and sew our clothes. In hard-hitting words and pictures, No Sweat tells the story of the chasm between the glamour of the catwalk and the squalor of the sweatshop. Don't go shopping without it. Contributors include JoAnn Mort and Alan Howard (UNITE), Julie Su, Charlie Kernaghan and the National Labor Committee (edited by Kitty Krupat), Bud Konheim (interviewed by Sally Singer), Mike Piore, John Cavanagh, MacKenzie Wark, Angela McRobbie, Robin Givhan, Paul Smith.

Preface and Acknowledgments1Testimony4Introduction9The Global Resistance to Sweatshops39From War Zone to Free Trade Zone51Paying to Lose Our Jobs79An Appeal to Walt Disney95The Myth of Nimble Fingers113Rat-Catching: An Interview with Bud Konheim123The Economics of the Sweatshop135El Monte Thai Garment Workers: Slave Sweatshops143Labor, History, and Sweatshops in the New Global Economy151New York: Defending the Union Contract173"They Want to Kill Us for a Little Money"193The Structure and Growth of the Los Angeles Garment Industry199The Labor Behind the Label: Clean Clothes Campaigns in Europe215Sweatshopping221Fashion as a Culture Industry227Tommy Hilfiger in the Age of Mass Customization249The Problem with Ugly Chic263A New Kind of Rag Trade?275After the Year of the Sweatshop: Postscript291No Sweat Fashion List, Department of Labor298Notes299Contributors310Photo credits312