Offside! Labour Rights and Sportswear Production in Asia

Oxfam International, Melbourne, 2006.

114 Pages Posted: 8 Jan 2015 Last revised: 15 Jul 2019

See all articles by Tim Connor

Tim Connor

University of Newcastle (Australia) - Newcastle Law School

Kelly Dent

Independent

Date Written: May 5, 2006

Abstract

This report considers 12 international sports brands — adidas, ASICS, FILA, Kappa, Lotto, Mizuno, New Balance, Nike, Puma, Reebok, Speedo and Umbro — and examines the steps they take to ensure their suppliers in Asia allow workers to organise trade unions and bargain collectively for better wages and conditions. It concludes that all sportswear companies need to take a more serious approach to workers’ right to freedom of association. Some companies — notably Reebok, Puma, adidas, Nike, ASICS and Umbro — are involved in positive initiatives which have led to improved conditions in some factories, but their overall approach to trade union rights has been inconsistent and at times contradictory. FILA, owned by Sports Brands International (SBI), has taken the least action to improve respect for trade union rights in its Asian supplier factories. FILA has failed to adequately address serious labour rights abuses when they have been brought to the company’s attention and since February 2005 has ignored multiple attempts by labour rights groups and trade unions to communicate with the company about labour issues.

Asian sportswear workers who want to form unions and bargain collectively frequently face discrimination, harassment, threats of dismissal and, in some cases, violent intimidation. Two of the cases researched for this report — one in Sri Lanka and the other in Indonesia — involved violent assaults on workers who were attempting to form unions in sportswear factories. Women, who make up 80% of the global workforce in the sportswear sector, face particular barriers to participating in trade unions due to gender discrimination within their workplaces, their societies and within workers’ organisations. Transnational corporations (TNCs) in sportswear and other industries cannot, on their own, create the conditions where trade union rights are fully respected. Governments have a responsibility to ensure that labour rights are protected by properly enforced state legislation. However, governments in developing countries are frequently wary of regulating the behaviour of TNCs for fear that they will lose production and investment to other countries. In this context sportswear TNCs can play an important role in ensuring that trade union rights are properly respected in their own supply chains, thereby reducing pressure on governments to erode state protection for these rights.

Keywords: Corporate Social Responsibility, Trade Unions, Indonesia, Labour Rights, Labor Rights, Sweatshops, Workers, Nike, Reebok, Adidas, New Balance, Puma, Pentland

Suggested Citation

Connor, Tim and Dent, Kelly, Offside! Labour Rights and Sportswear Production in Asia (May 5, 2006). Oxfam International, Melbourne, 2006. , Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2545713

Tim Connor (Contact Author)

University of Newcastle (Australia) - Newcastle Law School ( email )

1 University Drive
Callaghan, 2308
Australia

Kelly Dent

Independent

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