Who are the real winners of Foxconn's investment in Wisconsin?
Endless chores, verbal abuse, and physical confinement.
Why do states make it so easy for corporations to exploit their populations?
Domestic labourer are not recognised as workers under South Korean law, but worker-led initiatives are transforming the face of how this work is perceived and managed.
Care workers put their hearts into the job. Is asking for recognition and rights in return too much?
Transnational bargaining, corporate accountability, and a full revamp of the global labour architecture – these are the challenges facing unions as they seek to address exploitation in global supply chains.
Not much has changed since the ILO began to discuss decent work in supply chains 12 months ago.
Care workers in Taiwan are being worked to the point of exhaustion, with dangerous consequences. Could basic rights make life better for workers and recipients alike?
With more than one million domestic workers in the Philippines there is massive potential for collective action. From small beginnings huge strides have already been made.
French authorities are working hard to keep migrants either stationary and submissive or perpetually on the move in order to prevent them from coalescing into communities or forming alliances.
The roots of prejudice against domestic workers in India run deep.
A critical approach to domestic work based on our lived experiences. Español