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Posts Tagged ‘Sweatshops

FF_190869_s.jpgWanna show off some alumni pride? Or how about that cap of your favorite baseball team? If you look at the label of your cap and see that it was made in the Dominican Republic, chances are it was made in a sweatshop.

Sweatshop workers stitch logos into caps for Major League Baseball, the NHL, the NBA and the NFL.
Many college caps are made there, too. One company, BJ&B, for example, manufactures caps for the Universities of North Carolina-Chapel Hill, Missouri, Connecticut, Arizona, Louisiana State, Cornell, Northwestern, Penn State, Tulane and Purdue…Here’s how it works: A university licenses its name and logo to American apparel distributors like Nike, Starter, Champion and Reebok, and earns about $1.50 per cap. BJ&B, for example, then pays the worker 8 cents per cap. At that pay rate, a worker takes home $40 for a typical 56-hour work week, as calculated by UNITE, an anti-sweatshop lobbying group. The total cost of making the cap comes out to about $6.08, but consumers pay about $19.95 for the cap.

The good news is that BJ&B workers, thanks in part to universities’ pressuring, formed a union but they are only one sweatshop in a sea of free-trade areas that allow companies located there to be exempt from import fees and income taxes on the backs of workers.

Via / Republica Update

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Is Thalia Running Sweatshops?

9:56 am By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Celebrities|Chismes|Entrepreneurs|Fashion|Justice|Labor|Shopping · Comments Off

13 Sep 2006

Thalia.jpgWhile she may not be watching over them directly, recent accusations call into question the conditions under which the Mexican estrella’s clothing collection are manufactured. According to an investigation conducted by the National Labor Committee, there are sweatshops in Jordan engaging in human trafficing, forced labor, and violence against workers. These sweatshops produce clothes with labels for the GAP, Target, Liz Claiborne, Victoria’s Secret, L.L Bean and Thalía Sodi. Thalia, whose clothing line is distributed through K-mart y Sears Holdings responded to the investigation by saying:

Como diseñadora de mi propia línea de ropa siempre estoy consciente sobre todos los aspectos del negocio del diseño, eso incluye dónde y cómo se produce mi ropa.

Kmart y Sears, que son los únicos responsables de toda la producción y manufactura de mi línea de ropa y en quienes confío y sé que son muy diligentes, se aseguran de que las fábricas involucradas cumplan con los rígidos requisitos de la ley y de que sean auditados. Kmart me ha asegurado que éste no es uno de sus vendedores y que ellos manejarán este asunto de la forma más expedita posible

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Black Friday Doesn’t Have to be so Black

8:26 am By Maegan La Mala · Shopping · Comments Off

25 Nov 2005

shop3650_1 (3).jpg My mother had to open the retail store she manages at 7 am today. My cousins said they would be at the toy store at 6 am. The mall near my apartment was open at 5 am. The leftover turkey in the fridge, it’s time to go shopping! The day after Thanksgiving is considered the biggest holiday shopping day of the year and is sometimes called “Black Friday”. But that doesn’t mean that we have to join in the shopping madness or given the recent conversation on VL about sweatshops that we can’t shop with a conscience. There are alternatives to the early bird shopping specials and red tag sales.

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What’s in Your Jeans?

10:00 am By Maegan La Mala · Activism · Comments Off

7 Oct 2005

jeans.jpg Is there a little bit of sweat between you and your Calvin’s? According to SweatShop Watch, if you’re wearing Levi’s or Mudd jeans, there very well could be. The grassroots organization has mounted a campaign in solidarity with garment workers of Manufacturas LaJat in the area known as Gomez Palacio, Durango, Mexico. Workers there who help in the production of Levi’s and Mudd Jeans (as well as others) have been struggling in the maquiladora against the factory where they work being shut down, low wages, and unhealthy and unsafe working conditions. When workers tried to organize, management was accused of firing workers, bribing workers, and even sexually harassing workers.

Most of the time when we go shopping or when we get dressed in the morning, we don’t think about how clothes got on the rack or in our closets. Recognizing that some Latinos are struggling so we can look stylish should give us pause at least, if not action.

SweatShop Watch

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