No minimum wage, no sick pay, no maternity leave, no redundancy pay, forced overtime, no health and safety checks: this is the story of women around the world working to supply British supermarkets and retailers - the story told by Oxfam International in the report Trading Away Our Rights. It is the story of how retailers are using their power in supply chains systematically to push many of the costs and risks of business on to producers, who in turn pass them on to working women. The benefits of flexibility for companies at the top of the chain have come at the price of precarious employment for those at the bottom
This paper explores the dynamics of labour process change in the UK supermarket supply chain. Report...
Private, voluntary compliance programs, promoted by global corporations and nongovernmental organiz...
This project adopts two main research instruments - two online questionnaires (2 surveys of circa 14...
Across the world, millions of women in developing countries are working in global supply chains to p...
Inequality is rampant across the global economy, and the agro-food sector is no exception. At the to...
This is the fifth in a series of Briefings for Business that Oxfam has published recently, the purpo...
International food supply chains provide employment for tens of millions of women and men around the...
Inequality is rampant across the global economy, and the agro-food sector is no exception. At the to...
Inequality is rampant across the global economy, and the agro-food sector is no exception. At the to...
Oxfam believes that access to decent work on a living wage is a fundamental pathway out of poverty, ...
There is extensive research in the area of sustainability and its importance for long-term growth an...
This article explores the issue of transparency in supply chains for garment sector workers in two c...
Retail supply chains are a central feature of contemporary service-based economies. For supermarkets...
What are the barriers to ensuring that a living wage is paid, and what are the root causes of low wa...
The fresh vegetables commodity chain linking Kenyan producers with United Kingdom (UK) consumers emp...
This paper explores the dynamics of labour process change in the UK supermarket supply chain. Report...
Private, voluntary compliance programs, promoted by global corporations and nongovernmental organiz...
This project adopts two main research instruments - two online questionnaires (2 surveys of circa 14...
Across the world, millions of women in developing countries are working in global supply chains to p...
Inequality is rampant across the global economy, and the agro-food sector is no exception. At the to...
This is the fifth in a series of Briefings for Business that Oxfam has published recently, the purpo...
International food supply chains provide employment for tens of millions of women and men around the...
Inequality is rampant across the global economy, and the agro-food sector is no exception. At the to...
Inequality is rampant across the global economy, and the agro-food sector is no exception. At the to...
Oxfam believes that access to decent work on a living wage is a fundamental pathway out of poverty, ...
There is extensive research in the area of sustainability and its importance for long-term growth an...
This article explores the issue of transparency in supply chains for garment sector workers in two c...
Retail supply chains are a central feature of contemporary service-based economies. For supermarkets...
What are the barriers to ensuring that a living wage is paid, and what are the root causes of low wa...
The fresh vegetables commodity chain linking Kenyan producers with United Kingdom (UK) consumers emp...
This paper explores the dynamics of labour process change in the UK supermarket supply chain. Report...
Private, voluntary compliance programs, promoted by global corporations and nongovernmental organiz...
This project adopts two main research instruments - two online questionnaires (2 surveys of circa 14...