Offside! messages hit target but brands fail to deliver
In 2006 around the time of the World Cup Soccer tournament and following the release of the report Offside! Labour Rights and Sportswear production in Asia, people from around the world wrote thousands of messages to Sportsbrands asking them to improve workers human rights.
In January this year, Executive Director of Oxfam Australia, Andrew Hewett, wrote to 10 major sportsbrands asking them to address the concerns of consumers and citizens regarding the treatment of workers making their goods. Thousands of these messages were attached to each of Andrew’s letters.
Most of the brands responded in February saying that they are taking action to improve conditions in their supplier factories. These actions, however, are a long way off addressing the systemic abuse of workers rights that occurs in the supply chains of these companies. Only Puma and adidas responded to the nine major recommendations of the Offside report. Mizuno, Asics, Lotto, Umbro and Pentland all provided short, standard responses and dodged responding to all the major recommedations. Nike and New Balance have not yet responded.
We will be posting the responses from the brands along with Oxfam Australia’s assessment of their responses on the Dialog with Sportsbrands page of our website in April.
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Adidas fails to honour their promises of fairness and transparency
There is growing confusion and disillusionment amongst the ex-Spotec workers who are still waiting to get new work making adidas after losing their jobs at the end of 2006.
Over the past months, five hundred supporters have called on adidas to improve the human rights of workers who produce adidas’ products. Many of these letters have called on adidas to uphold their commitment to a fair and transparent process in prioritising hiring the ex-Spotec workers into the new Ching Luh adidas supplier in Indonesia.
While we wait to hear back from adidas, we understand that the Ching Luh factory has now received machinery and may be ready to start production next month. We understand that none of the union officials from Spotec have been called for interviews at Ching Luh.
If you haven’t already, please write to adidas calling on them to ensure that ex-Spotec workers are hired into Ching Luh.
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Unraveling the garment industry: Book

Ethel C. Brooks takes a critical look at transnational anti-sweatshop campaigning in Unraveling the Garment Industry: Transnational Organizing and Women's Work.
Don Wells, who teaches in the Labour Studies Programme and Political Science Department in Ontario, provides a review of the book. Here is an excerpt from his review:
"Most of the world's 30 million garment workers toil in Dickensian misery. The garment industry is also the primary focus of transnational anti-sweatshop campaigns to reverse the "race to the bottom" in global labour standards".
Read the rest of Don Well's review.
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