Społeczna odpowiedzialność biznesu w przemyśle odzieżowym – Clean Clothes Campaign a państwa rozwijające się

Autor

  • Tomasz Wawrzyniak University of Lodz, Faculty of Economics and Sociology, Field of studies: Economics and International Business

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18778/2082-4440.18.02

Słowa kluczowe:

społeczna odpowiedzialność biznesu, kraje rozwijające się

Abstrakt

Celem artykułu jest przeanalizowanie działań organizacji Clean Clothes Campaign podejmowanych w celu polepszenia złej sytuacji pracowników w krajach rozwijających się oraz promowania idei społecznej odpowiedzialności biznesu. Aby lepiej przybliżyć problem, na początku artykułu odniesiono się krótko do dwóch krajów rozwijających się, Bangladeszu i Kambodży (dane zostały zaczerpnięte z Eurostatu oraz stron Trading Economics i CIA The World Factbook). Następnie opisano strukturę CCC oraz metody, dzięki którym organizacja chcę osiągnąć swoje cele. Przedstawiono także szeroką sieć współpracy między CCC a innymi organizacjami z całego świata i organami decyzyjnymi Unii Europejskiej. Reasumując, można stwierdzić, że działalność CCC staje się coraz bardziej istotna, a w ostatnich latach organizacja zyskuje uznanie zarówno organów formalnych, jak i społeczeństwa.

Bibliografia

Bangladesh Bureau of Statistics (2011), Report on Labour Force Survey 2010, http://203.112.218.66/WebTestApplication/userfiles/Image/Latest%20Statistics%20Release/LFS%20Report%202010.pdf (last accessed: 16 September 2016).
Google Scholar

Bangladesh Bureau of Statistics (2015), Population and Housing Census 2011, www.bbs.gov.bd/WebTestApplication/userfiles/Bangladesh_glance.pdf (last accessed: 16 September 2016).
Google Scholar

Carroll B. Archie (1999), Corporate Social Responsibility: Evolution of a Definitional Construct. “Business & Society”, Vol. 38, No. 3, September.
Google Scholar DOI: https://doi.org/10.1177/000765039903800303

CIA The World Factbook (2016). Bangladesh,https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/bg.html, (last accessed:16 September 2016).
Google Scholar

Clean Clothes Campaign (1998), Code of Labour Practices for the Apparel Industry Including Sportswear, www.cleanclothes.org/resources/publications/clean-clothes-campaign-model-code-of-conduct (last accessed: 16 September 2016).
Google Scholar

Clean Clothes Campaign (2004), Olympic Report, http://fairolympics.org/background/olympicreporteng.pdf (last accessed: 2 March 2017).
Google Scholar

Clean Clothes Campaign (2007), Clean Clothes Campaign letter to John Ruggie, https://business-humanrights.org/sites/default/files/media/bhr/files/Clean-Clothes-Campaign-letter-Ruggie-23-Mar-2007.pdf (last accessed: 7 March 2017).
Google Scholar

Clean Clothes Campaign (2010), International Forum Special, Threads, Clean Clothes Campaign Newsletter, 2010, No. 30, https://cleanclothes.org/resources/newsletters/ccc-newsletter-threads-no-30-international-forum (last accessed: 17 September 2016).
Google Scholar

Clean Clothes Campaign (2011), Annual report 2011, www.cleanclothes.org/about/annual-reports/2011-annual-report (last accessed: 2 March 2017).
Google Scholar

Clean Clothes Campaign (2014), Wage struggle continues, https://www.cleanclothes.org/ua/2014/cases/cambodia-wage-struggle (last accessed: 2 March 2017).
Google Scholar

Clean Clothes Campaign (2015a), Cases in Bangladesh, https://cleanclothes.org/ua/2014/maps/map-bangladesh (last accessed: 2 March 2017).
Google Scholar

Clean Clothes Campaign (2015b), Clean Clothes Campaign Contribution to the Informal meeting with stakeholders on responsible management of the supply chain in the garment sector – European Commission – 23rd January 2015 – Brussels, https://cleanclothes.org/img/pdf/ccc-contribution-flagship-initiative (last accessed: 2 March 2017).
Google Scholar

Clean Clothes Campaign (2015c), Chunji workers win right to organize at factory, https://cleanclothes.org/ua/2014/cases/chunji-knit (last accessed: 2 March 2017).
Google Scholar

Clean Clothes Campaign (2016), The principles of Clean Clothes Campaign’s work, www.cleanclothes.org/about/principles (last accessed: 2 March 2017).
Google Scholar

Clean Clothes Campaign (2017), Who we are, www.cleanclothes.org/about/whowe-are (last accessed: 17 June 2017).
Google Scholar

European Commission (2014), Informal Meeting with Member States on Responsible management of the supply chain in the garment sector, http://ec.europa.eu/transparency/regexpert/index.cfm?do=groupDetail.groupDetailDoc&id=16999&no=2 (last accessed: 1 March 2017).
Google Scholar

International Labour Organization (2015), Fundamental Conventions, www.ilo.org/wcmsp5/groups/public/@ed_norm/@declaration/documents/publication/wcms_095895.pdf (last accessed: 7 March 2017).
Google Scholar

National Institute of Statistics and International Labour Organization (2010), Labour and Social Trends in Cambodia 2010, www.ilo.org/wcmsp5/groups/public/---asia/---ro-bangkok/documents/publication/wcms_158511.pdf (last accessed: 2 March 2017).
Google Scholar

The Observatory of Economic Complexity (2016), Bangladesh, http://atlas.media.mit.edu/en/profile/country/bgd/ (last accessed: 2 March 2017).
Google Scholar

The Observatory of Economic Complexity (2016), Cambodia, http://atlas.media.mit.edu/en/profile/country/khm/ (last accessed: 2 March 2017).
Google Scholar

Trading Economics (2016), Bangladesh, www.tradingeconomics.com/-bangladesh/gdp-growth (last accessed: 2 March 2017).
Google Scholar

Trading Economics, Cambodia, www.tradingeconomics.com/cambodia/gdp (last accessed: 2 March 2017).
Google Scholar

US Department of State (2013), Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labour, Bangladesh – Country Reports on Human Rights Practices for 2013, www.state.gov/documents/organization/220600.pdf (last accessed: 2 March 2017).
Google Scholar

Opublikowane

2017-06-30

Jak cytować

Wawrzyniak, T. (2017). Społeczna odpowiedzialność biznesu w przemyśle odzieżowym – Clean Clothes Campaign a państwa rozwijające się. Ekonomia Międzynarodowa, (18), 79–91. https://doi.org/10.18778/2082-4440.18.02

Numer

Dział

Articles