[Excerpt] No country or company should gain a commercial edge in international trade by jailing or killing union organizers, crushing independent union movements, or banning strikes. Gaining an advantage in labor costs should not depend on exploiting child labor or forced labor, or discriminating against women or oppressed ethnic groups. Deliberately exposing workers to life-threatening safety and health hazards, or holding wages and benefits below livable levels should not be permissible corporate strategies. But these are exactly the abuses that happen all too often in a rapidly globalized world trading system based on free trade
[Excerpt] Fresh information, insightful analysis, and sharp controversy marked presentations by emin...
Contemporary economic globalization, which is driven and regulated primarily by multinational corpor...
This article reframes the outward-looking perspective on workers’ rights provisions in free trade ag...
[Excerpt] No country or company should gain a commercial edge in international trade by jailing or k...
[Excerpt] No country or company should gain a commercial edge in international trade by jailing or k...
[Excerpt] Labor rights advocacy is the most direct challenge to the primacy of a marketplace ideolog...
[Excerpt] This Article seeks to […] articulate a defense of enforceable international labor rights a...
[Excerpt] It has become obvious to everyone in and around the U.S. labor movement that our problems ...
[Excerpt] Without an overall trade agreement containing stronger labour rights linkage than that of ...
[Excerpt] With Trade Conditions and Labor Rights, Henry J. Frundt makes a signal contribution to the...
The paper explains that workers in different countries are not adversaries and no actual conflict of...
The debate over linking trade and worker rights is often a dialogue of the deaf, with advocates on e...
[Excerpt] For decades, the U.S. foreign assistance program has sought with limited results to furthe...
Since the beginning of mankind, not far up on the ladder of human existence trade began between huma...
[Excerpt]In the fall of 1982, a small group of labor, religious, and human rights activists began ch...
[Excerpt] Fresh information, insightful analysis, and sharp controversy marked presentations by emin...
Contemporary economic globalization, which is driven and regulated primarily by multinational corpor...
This article reframes the outward-looking perspective on workers’ rights provisions in free trade ag...
[Excerpt] No country or company should gain a commercial edge in international trade by jailing or k...
[Excerpt] No country or company should gain a commercial edge in international trade by jailing or k...
[Excerpt] Labor rights advocacy is the most direct challenge to the primacy of a marketplace ideolog...
[Excerpt] This Article seeks to […] articulate a defense of enforceable international labor rights a...
[Excerpt] It has become obvious to everyone in and around the U.S. labor movement that our problems ...
[Excerpt] Without an overall trade agreement containing stronger labour rights linkage than that of ...
[Excerpt] With Trade Conditions and Labor Rights, Henry J. Frundt makes a signal contribution to the...
The paper explains that workers in different countries are not adversaries and no actual conflict of...
The debate over linking trade and worker rights is often a dialogue of the deaf, with advocates on e...
[Excerpt] For decades, the U.S. foreign assistance program has sought with limited results to furthe...
Since the beginning of mankind, not far up on the ladder of human existence trade began between huma...
[Excerpt]In the fall of 1982, a small group of labor, religious, and human rights activists began ch...
[Excerpt] Fresh information, insightful analysis, and sharp controversy marked presentations by emin...
Contemporary economic globalization, which is driven and regulated primarily by multinational corpor...
This article reframes the outward-looking perspective on workers’ rights provisions in free trade ag...