New Hope or False Dawn?
- 1 April 2001
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Global Social Policy
- Vol. 1 (1) , 48-78
- https://doi.org/10.1177/146801810100100104
Abstract
This article maps the complex and fast-changing terrain of voluntary corporate codes of conduct, self-regulatory measures increasingly adopted by firms as a response to concerns about working conditions in global production chains. It considers their origins, their potentials and weaknesses, and finally their implications for the restructuring of social policy in a globalizing world. Despite there being considerably more rhetoric about codes than good practice, the processes through which codes have been developed has brought positive impacts in terms of highlighting the needs and voices of hitherto excluded groups of workers (women export workers, homeworkers, casual workers) in social policy and labour regulation debates.Keywords
This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- Child Labour: A different perspectiveDevelopment, 2000
- The East Asian Phenomenon: The Consensus, the Dissent, and the Significance of the Present CrisisCapital & Class, 1999
- Foreign Direct Investment to Developing CountriesPublished by Springer Nature ,1999
- Corporate Codes of Conduct: the Privatized Application of Labour StandardsPublished by Springer Nature ,1999
- The Role of Voluntary Codes of Conduct and Regulation — a Retailer’s ViewPublished by Springer Nature ,1999
- Introduction: What Rules for the World Economy?Published by Springer Nature ,1999
- New approaches to international labour regulationIndustrial Law Journal, 1997
- Labour Law without the State?University of Toronto Law Journal, 1996
- Divisions over the international division of labourCapital & Class, 1984
- ‘Nimble Fingers Make Cheap Workers’: An Analysis of Women's Employment in Third World Export ManufacturingFeminist Review, 1981