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== Description ==
<center>[[Student Social Action Movements|Home]]  |  [[Student Social Action Against Racism|Race]] | [[Student Social Action for Labor Rights|Labor Rights]] | [[Student Social Action Against Discrimination related to Gender|Gender]] | [[What Can Be Done?| Taking Action]] | [[Sources for Student Social Action Movements|Sources]] </center>
<center>[[Student Social Action Movements|Home]]  |  [[Student Social Action Against Racism|Race]] | [[Student Social Action for Labor Rights|Labor Rights]] | [[Student Social Action Against Discrimination related to Gender|Gender]] | [[What Can Be Done?| Taking Action]] | [[Sources for Student Social Action Movements|Sources]] </center>




== Description ==
[[Image:Wrc.JPG]]
[[Image:Wrc.JPG]]



Revision as of 04:39, 10 May 2006

Home | Race | Labor Rights | Gender | Taking Action | Sources


Description

The Workers Rights Consortium was created as an alternative to the Fair Labor Association, by college and university students and administrators and labor rights experts, in order to provide to colleges and universities only the chance to see real labor codes of conducts enforced. The WRC is completely independent from companies in the Apparel Industry. The interesting factor about the WRC is that it was created by people concerned about the sweatshop situation, rather than by the companies in the apparel industry themselves, attempting to calm and provide a sense of security to their customers. The Workers Rights Consortium intends to reach out to factory workers and make means available to raise claims and/or demands regarding their working conditions. Because of this, the WRC does not issue certifications of companies that make them "sweat-free". Rather, the companies are under constant inspection.

Mission

Relevance

History

WRC vs. FLA

What is the FLA?

So, what's the difference?

The WRC and the FLA are two distinct organizations, with different approaches to labor rights enforcement and different scopes. Any comparison of the two must start from the recognition that their projects are fundamentally different. The WRC works with local NGOs to empower workers to report labor rights violations in order to assist colleges and universities in enforcing their codes of conduct. The FLA seeks to accredit apparel brands as in compliance with FLA standards by requiring that companies adopt monitoring programs.
(United Students Against Sweatshops, 2004, p.2)

In January 2001, Marion Traub-Werner, one of the founders of USAS approached national and international media with documented footage and strong evidence of sweatshop conditions of labor in Kuk-Dong de Atlixco in Mexico, a subcontractor of Nike. This was no news, big corporations use sweatshops. Nevertheless, the relevance of this event was that Nike, and especially that particular factory in Mexico was supposedly approved under FLA regulations.

This event allowed for students organizations to prove what they already suspected, association with the FLA did not provide a guarantee of being a Sweat-Free University. In the words of Naomi Klein:

"[Nike] says that they have a very strict code of conduct and that they are a part of the FLA [...]. ALso, it hires external control corporations that make sure that the 700 factories that produce their merchandise follow their rules[...] The students have rejected this view, because they consider that corporations cannot control themselves."

(2002, p.80)

Currently, the Kuk-Dong factory, now renamed Mexmode, is under WRC monitoring, and has succesfully achieved sweat-free conditions.

Why join WRC?

Recent Collaborations

There have been recent collaborations between the WRC and the FLA. Joint conferences and meetings have occurred in which both organizations have agreed to work together to achieve common goals. In fact, the FLA's Executive Director has publicly stated that both companies are "complimentary", and that colleges and universities should aim to joining to both organizations.

To read Harvard University's letter to Harvard Students Against Sweatshops when he communicated that the university was to affiliate to the WRC, in addition to their previous affiliation with the FLA, follow the following link:

http://hcs.harvard.edu/~pslm/hsas/summersletterdec03.pdf


Currently, Dickinson College is only affiliated with the Fair Labor Association...

Get Involved!

www.workersrights.org

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