How Civil Society Can Help: Sweatshop Workers As Globalization's Consequence (Features) How Civil Society Can Help: Sweatshop Workers As Globalization's Consequence (Features)

How Civil Society Can Help: Sweatshop Workers As Globalization's Consequence (Features‪)‬

Harvard International Review 2011, Summer, 33, 2

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Publisher Description

Italy's idyllic region of Tuscany is known as a top-tier tourist destination. Less well known is that it is also one of Europe's frontiers of human trafficking and a case-study in the effects of globalization. The garment and textile factories of Prato figured prominently in Italy's "miracle" economic performance of the 1950s and 1960s, with more than 4,500 small shops producing many of the world's most sought-after brands. Garment production is buoyant there again, but "economia sommersa" (submerged economy) sweatshops account for more than a third of the goods produced, and many of the Chinese workers are working long hours for little or no pay, due to huge debts to trafficking gangs. Now that the new anti-immigration mayor is closing illegal operators, hundreds of workers without legal working papers are in limbo as the Chinese government has refused the Italian government's attempts at repatriation. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

GENRE
Business & Personal Finance
RELEASED
2011
June 22
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
14
Pages
PUBLISHER
Harvard International Relations Council, Inc.
SELLER
The Gale Group, Inc., a Delaware corporation and an affiliate of Cengage Learning, Inc.
SIZE
202.3
KB

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