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Active Learning and Research
Active Learning and Research
A longtime activist, sociologist Bob Ross reveals the persistence of sweatshops in the global economy, and encourages his students to confront issues concerning fair labor practices.

Sweatshops: Give us bread, but give us roses

Professor Robert Ross's research
Who made the clothes you're wearing? Workers in the U. S.? In India? A child? An illegal immigrant? At least if your clothes are made in the U. S. you can be sure that the workers who made them are treated fairly. Can't you? Over the last five years Professor Ross and his undergraduates have been studying  sweatshops, especially in the context of the apparel industry.

"Our lives shall not be sweated from birth until life closes.
Hearts starve as well as bodies; give us bread but give us roses!"

----from the labor song 'Bread and Roses' by James Oppenheim

  • The sweatshop problem
  • A global problem
  • Unions and legislation
  • Yesterday's conditions today
  • How to help

The sweatshop problem

Professor Ross and his students know that sweatshops are not just a bad dream left over from the 19th century. Sweatshops continue to exist in places as diverse as the U.S., India, and China, and Ross thinks that the expanding global economy actually encourages the proliferation of sweatshops. Ross will soon be publishing a book discussing their findings, and he recently presented a paper titled 'Vulnerable labor in global capitalism' at a conference in Hong Kong. 

A global problem

Global capitalism creates a global labor market
Because restraints on international financial investment are loosening and transportation and communication are improving 
  • businesses need no longer rely on local populations for their workforce, but can seek out cheaper labor in other countries
  • workers can more often move to the source of employment, even when that source is in another country
Investment flows to places where labor is more vulnerable
Businesses often seek out labor that is cheap and vulnerable so that products will be inexpensive to produce and so that they won't have to "waste" time and effort negotiating with the employees.
  • places where unions are forbidden or discouraged
  • places that offer workers little or no legal protection
  • places where the government is authoritarian and has little regard for civil rights
  • places where people are poor and desperate for work, or where they live illegally, such that they will work without complaint in unhealthy environments
  • places where the labor force is composed of women, minorities, children, or illegal immigrants
Protected workers become less protected When investment abandons protected workers, those workers either loose their jobs or, to compete and keep their jobs, indicate a willingness to work in substandard conditions. 

Promoter of growth: Not
Some economists argue that sweatshop industry can provide an impetus to economic growth in developing countries. Ross cites research that suggests that in fact Multinational corporation investment is associated with growth slowdown and an increase in inequality.

A necessary evil: Not
Ross debunks the "trickle down" myth: that working conditions will improve when the employers become wealthy and their prosperity "trickles down."  Some look to the history of the Western industrial revolution and maintain that economic growth requires a period where labor is exploited, after which conditions improve by themselves. In fact, it was workers and reformers who fought to improve their status by forming unions and promoting protective legislation.

The role of unions and legislation

It is unfortunate that workers can't always rely for protection on the good conscience of the employer. Labor abuse is most effectively curbed through legislation and unionization. In some countries, usually those characterized as "developed," laws have been enacted to protect the health of workers in different industries. Legislation regulates the maximum number of hours that can be worked, minimum wage and overtime pay, time allowed for rest breaks and meals, sanitary facilities and the prevention of occupational hazards. Some governments allow workers to unionize, enabling them to negotiate with employers to better their working conditions. In many countries, however, protective legislation is absent, inadequate, or ignored, and unions are discouraged. Even in countries like the U. S. where legislation is fairly comprehensive, some categories of workers are left unprotected. And U. S. legislation doesn't always help U. S. workers who loose jobs when their company decides instead to employee workers in Mexico.

Yesterday's conditions today

A female El Salvadoran garment worker in Manhattan testified in 1996:

"My boss doesn't pay any tax or social security.  I work at least 56 hours a week, Monday to Saturday.  Sometimes I go 66 hours a week.  I make $200.07 a week.  If there is a lot more I have to work on Sundays.  I never get vacation.  I never even get a whole weekend off.  Sometimes I have to work on Easter, Thanksgiving and Christmas.  The conditions are very bad.  My factory is very hot in summer and very cold in winter.  My boss is screaming to me all the time.  He is always very angry.  I can't ask him any questions because I'm afraid he's going to hit me.  All the time he hits me working, like that (she gestures hitting her head with her fist).  The factory is very dirty.  When I am working I'm afraid because there is big rats and mice crawl on my feet."

How to help

Clark Students interested in joining United Students Against Sweatshops (USAS) can email either Kendra Fehrer at or Matt Feinstein

 

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Sweatshops then and now.

Black and white photos from How the Other Half Lives, by Jacob Riis.

riis1150.jpg (12949 bytes) Making "knee pants" at 45 cents a dozen; Click to enlarge
riis2150.jpg (11680 bytes) Making neckties; Click to enlarge
riis3150.jpg (12750 bytes) Making artificial flowers; Click to enlarge
riis4150.jpg (11474 bytes) Sewing; Click to enlarge
riis5150.jpg (12820 bytes) Cigar makers; Click to enlarge
elmonteca150.gif (13309 bytes) August 1995: Work Station in Elmonte, CA where 72 workers were held in slavery; Click to enlarge.
queensny150.gif (14674 bytes) Queens, New York City, 1994. Click to enlarge. Photo from the National Museum of American History.


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