Resources

Up Front: Sweatshops and the Olympics
The global sportswear brands abusing workers’ rights and our campaign to stop them
Adidas Briefing
Around the world 775,000 workers, mainly women, in 1,200 factories across 65 countries make Adidas products.
Derechos de las Mujeres, Resistencia de las Mujeres
Spanish translation of our report Women's Rights, Women's Resistance
Taking Liberties
This report, published jointly with Labour Behind the Label, provides yet another example of the exploitation that lies behind the clothes sold on the UK high street.
Up Front: Women at work
Whether on farms, plantations or in factories, women are more likely than men to suffer from poverty wages, as well as deplorable working conditions and physical abuse on the job.
Up Front: Love Fashion Hate Sweatshops
We love fashion. But the clothes we buy in the UK come at a terrible human cost. Millions of workers around the world suffer poverty wages ard dire conditions, producing cheap fashion for sale in our high street shops. This can't go on.
Ignoring the Law
Despite the passage of the 2006 Labour Law, conditions for Banlagdeshi garment workers remain dire. This briefing paper outlines how workers in Bangladesh's sweatshops toil in unsafe factories while earning paltry wages and having few or no benefits. ...