Question 3 – how can we promote business accountability for labour standards in supply chains?
The ILO estimates that the annual profits from ‘forced labour’ amount to $150 billion per year.
Life as a foreign guestworker in the U.S. is far from easy. You're tied to one employer, unable to walk away, and face challenges with labour organising. Español
BTS speaks with Mark Meinster of Warehouse Workers for Justice on how supply chains affect workers in the global north, as well as on the need for solidarity between workers the world over.
Language within the Rastafari culture, known as Iyaric, or Word Sound, has been formed in resistance to the effects of white supremacist domination as it manifest in slavery and colonisation.
The parish of St Paul’s occupies an important place in the history of Black Britain. But what part should the history of slavery play in its inhabitants identities?
Most public debate over the legacy of Edward Colston focuses on his statue. But what of the schoolchildren’s ceremonies that take place in the cathedral?
The debate over Edward Colston’s statue goes to the heart of the visual politics of memory and history. What can Britain learn from France’s treatment of its slave-trading past?
Legacies of slavery’s past dot many a British cityscape. But how best to handle the architectural politics of memory?
BTS speaks with Benjamin Woods of Jobs With Justice regarding the importance of a binding convention on supply chains.
Life as a Mexican supply chain worker in the U.S. is far from easy. From exploitation to blacklisting, the challenges pile up.
BTS speaks with Georgios Altintzis of the International Trade Union Confederation on the lag between globalisation and governance that is devastating the global work force.
What are labour conditions like for sub-contracted homeworkers in Chile? What can be done to improve them?