TY - JOUR
T1 - Governing Global Supply Chains
T2 - What We Know (and Don't) about Improving Labor Rights and Working Conditions
AU - Berliner, Daniel
AU - Greenleaf, Anne Regan
AU - Lake, Milli
AU - Levi, Margaret
AU - Noveck, Jennifer
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
Copyright ©2015 by Annual Reviews. All rights reserved.
PY - 2015/11/3
Y1 - 2015/11/3
N2 - Research over the past decade has made considerable progress toward achieving a holistic understanding of the myriad actors, interests, and relationships shaping labor rights in global supply chains, but numerous obstacles remain to building a more cumulative research program. In this essay we outline two major challenges and several fruitful directions forward. First, we review the different outcomes of interest in research on labor rights and highlight several tensions that lead to difficulty comparing findings across studies, inappropriate data choices, and unexamined causal assumptions. Second, we highlight a failure to adequately integrate the findings of research in two different subliteratures, one focusing on the incentives of states and firms to adopt reforms, and a second focusing on the implementation of those reforms with monitoring and enforcement mechanisms. We conclude by highlighting the important questions raised by a clearer integration of these two literatures and identifying several recent studies that begin to answer them.
AB - Research over the past decade has made considerable progress toward achieving a holistic understanding of the myriad actors, interests, and relationships shaping labor rights in global supply chains, but numerous obstacles remain to building a more cumulative research program. In this essay we outline two major challenges and several fruitful directions forward. First, we review the different outcomes of interest in research on labor rights and highlight several tensions that lead to difficulty comparing findings across studies, inappropriate data choices, and unexamined causal assumptions. Second, we highlight a failure to adequately integrate the findings of research in two different subliteratures, one focusing on the incentives of states and firms to adopt reforms, and a second focusing on the implementation of those reforms with monitoring and enforcement mechanisms. We conclude by highlighting the important questions raised by a clearer integration of these two literatures and identifying several recent studies that begin to answer them.
KW - Enforcement
KW - Globalization
KW - Labor standards
KW - Monitoring
KW - Workers' rights
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U2 - 10.1146/annurev-lawsocsci-120814-121322
DO - 10.1146/annurev-lawsocsci-120814-121322
M3 - Review article
AN - SCOPUS:84946711414
SN - 1550-3585
VL - 11
SP - 193
EP - 209
JO - Annual Review of Law and Social Science
JF - Annual Review of Law and Social Science
ER -