The Accord on Fire and Building Safety in Bangladesh (the Accord) is generally seen as a positive development in ensuring that Bangladeshi garment industry workers have access to safe working conditions. A central structural difference between the Accord and earlier corporate social responsibility (CSR) initiatives is that the Accord takes the form of an enforceable contract that directly connects first-world buyers with representatives of the third-world laborers of their supply chains. Traditionally, CSR mechanisms tread a fine line between a promise of decent labor conditions, often targeted at first-world consumers, and the nonbinding nature of such mechanisms, at least from the perspective of third-world laborers. The chief competitor ...
We outline the drivers, main features, and conceptual underpinnings of the compliance paradigm. We t...
Global supply chains present major challenges for company law and corporate governance, nationally a...
Conceptualizing how private actors can and should control their supply chains is a tricky question w...
We use recent research and two 2018 arbitration cases to argue that the 2013 Bangladesh Accord on Fi...
This article address the issue of employee safety and the social responsibility of multinational app...
To what extent are multinational corporations (MNCs) able to address grand social challenges through...
This discussion aims to review the emergence of the “Accord on Fire and Building Safety in Banglades...
Edited by Kiyoteru Tsutsui, and Alwyn Lim,International audienceOn December 14, 2010, twenty-nine pe...
Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) and Industrial Democracy are two paradigmatic approaches to tr...
International audienceThe Accord on Fire and Building Safety in Bangladesh ('the Accord') has receiv...
This article reports the findings of a field study on the emergence of collective agreements led by ...
The Accord on Fire and Building Safety in Bangladesh (‘the Accord’) has received both praise and cri...
This paper examines how far the workplace inspection programme established under the 2013 Accord on ...
This research addresses a number of questions that have been raised in the wake of the Rana Plaza fa...
The scale of the tragedy at Rana Plaza in Bangladesh, in which more than 1,000 garment factory worke...
We outline the drivers, main features, and conceptual underpinnings of the compliance paradigm. We t...
Global supply chains present major challenges for company law and corporate governance, nationally a...
Conceptualizing how private actors can and should control their supply chains is a tricky question w...
We use recent research and two 2018 arbitration cases to argue that the 2013 Bangladesh Accord on Fi...
This article address the issue of employee safety and the social responsibility of multinational app...
To what extent are multinational corporations (MNCs) able to address grand social challenges through...
This discussion aims to review the emergence of the “Accord on Fire and Building Safety in Banglades...
Edited by Kiyoteru Tsutsui, and Alwyn Lim,International audienceOn December 14, 2010, twenty-nine pe...
Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) and Industrial Democracy are two paradigmatic approaches to tr...
International audienceThe Accord on Fire and Building Safety in Bangladesh ('the Accord') has receiv...
This article reports the findings of a field study on the emergence of collective agreements led by ...
The Accord on Fire and Building Safety in Bangladesh (‘the Accord’) has received both praise and cri...
This paper examines how far the workplace inspection programme established under the 2013 Accord on ...
This research addresses a number of questions that have been raised in the wake of the Rana Plaza fa...
The scale of the tragedy at Rana Plaza in Bangladesh, in which more than 1,000 garment factory worke...
We outline the drivers, main features, and conceptual underpinnings of the compliance paradigm. We t...
Global supply chains present major challenges for company law and corporate governance, nationally a...
Conceptualizing how private actors can and should control their supply chains is a tricky question w...