organising in a global economy an itglwf perspective

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Organising in a Global Economy An ITGLWF Perspective

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Page 1: Organising in a Global Economy An ITGLWF Perspective

Organising in a Global Economy

An ITGLWF Perspective

Page 2: Organising in a Global Economy An ITGLWF Perspective

Aims for Session

• Globalisation and its impact on organising

• The peculiarities of textile, clothing and footwear

• The ITGLWF response

• IFAs and Organising • Some other approaches

• (The China Syndrome)

Page 3: Organising in a Global Economy An ITGLWF Perspective

The 4 Pillars of Globalisation• Rapid advances in transport and

communications technology

• Mobile international capital

• Free trade policy

• Increased labour migration

• Segmented and oppressed global labour markets

Page 4: Organising in a Global Economy An ITGLWF Perspective

The Global Assembly line

• Garments designed in the USA • Manufactured under contract in China• by a company owned in Hong Kong • Using raw materials from all around the world.• transported to the UK in container ships

carrying a flag of convenience and crewed by Filipino seafarers.

• Payroll and other data tasks carried out in Asia

Page 5: Organising in a Global Economy An ITGLWF Perspective

The ‘New Economy’ in Textiles Clothing and Footwear

Retailer Manufacturer Suppliers

Fo

rmal eco

no

my

Info

rmal E

con

om

y

Own label

Wholly owned subsidiaries

O u t s o u r c e dO u t s o u r c e d

Logistics

Page 6: Organising in a Global Economy An ITGLWF Perspective

To what extent are similar patterns emerging in manufacture or service delivery in your sector?

Page 7: Organising in a Global Economy An ITGLWF Perspective

The ‘New Economy’ in Textiles Clothing and Footwear

Retailer Manufacturer Suppliers

Fo

rmal eco

no

my

Info

rmal E

con

om

y

Own label

Wholly owned subsidiaries

O u t s o u r c e dO u t s o u r c e d

Logistics

Subcontractor

Shop houses, sub subcontractors and homeworkers

Page 8: Organising in a Global Economy An ITGLWF Perspective

Global Supply Chains and International Framework Agreements

Retailer Manufacturer Suppliers

Logistics

Merchandiser

Page 9: Organising in a Global Economy An ITGLWF Perspective

Strategy on IFAs

• IFA – a test for Global Unions?

• Ability to negotiate a collective agreement at global level

• Ability to use that agreement to support organising on the ground eg Accor Hotels

• Entry point however is via a well organised HQ MNC

• What happens when this is not the case?

Page 10: Organising in a Global Economy An ITGLWF Perspective

MNC

Fo

rmal

eco

no

my

Info

rmal

Eco

no

my

Subsidiary - Wholly ownedcontractor

subcontractor

Homeworkersfreelancers

Trade Union Organisation in the supply chain

Page 11: Organising in a Global Economy An ITGLWF Perspective

MNC e.g. Nike

Fo

rmal

eco

no

my

IFAsIn

form

al E

con

om

y

Subsidiarycontractor

subcontractor

Homeworkersfreelancers

Code of conduct

No Production!

Page 12: Organising in a Global Economy An ITGLWF Perspective

Corporate Social responsibilityModel 1(Buyer) eg Nike

Code

MonitoringImplementation

VerificationReporting

Page 13: Organising in a Global Economy An ITGLWF Perspective

The Code Problem

Eg Supplier Factory in

Central America

Current situation

Page 14: Organising in a Global Economy An ITGLWF Perspective

CSR Model 2

MonitoringImplementation

VerificationReporting

Multi Stakeholder Initiative

Page 15: Organising in a Global Economy An ITGLWF Perspective

Successful campaigns to disclose locations of suppliers/contractors

Page 16: Organising in a Global Economy An ITGLWF Perspective

Sectoral Framework Agreement on Trade Union Rights

Page 17: Organising in a Global Economy An ITGLWF Perspective

Dealing with a Freedom of Association violation

Page 18: Organising in a Global Economy An ITGLWF Perspective

Limitations

• Disclosure of locations does not lead to wide scale organising

• Tackling violations via IFA or MSI involvement is piecemeal and reactive

• Does not tackle the crucial issue of access for organisers

Page 19: Organising in a Global Economy An ITGLWF Perspective

Our approach

• GS and GUF staff involvement in major MSIs

• Bespoke framework agreements on trade union rights

• Research on organising targets

• Major suppliers / brands

• Regional meetings with csr staff from brands

• National meetings between csr staff, suppliers EPZ managers and government officials on FOA and access

Page 20: Organising in a Global Economy An ITGLWF Perspective

Questions

• What experience do we have of IFAs or codes of conduct or other instruments being used as organising levers?

• What is happening specifically around the issue of trade union access in your sector?

• How does your GUF approach the issue of freedom Of Association in China?