
Resources


Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions
This report exposes the companies that are profiting from the Occupation and calls on ordinary people around the world to take action.
Women's labour migration in the context of globalisation
This report looks at women's labour migration in the manufacturing export sectors, highlighting that the hiring of young, flexible and cheap women workers forms an explicit strategy of governments and big corporations in the export sector.
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.Image

A Bitter Cup
Although the tea industry is booming and UK supermarkets are cashing in, workers in India and Keny are harassed, poorly paid and denied trade union rights on tea plantations and in tea packing factories.
Movilizacion por la justicia global
Este documento introduce el marco estratégico de War on Want para los siguientes cinco años, de abril de 2010 a marzo de 2015.
Up Front: South Africa 2010
While vast sums have been invested in tourist facilities ahead of the 2010 World Cup, millions of South Africans today face appalling living conditions.
Mobilising for Global Justice
This document presents War on Want's strategic framework for the next five years.
Annual Review 2010
War on Want's 2010 Annual Review shows how we sustained our work at record levels over the past year.
Briefing: No More Business As Usual
The world is in the midst of the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression of the 1930s. Millions of jobs have already been destroyed and millions more are under threat.
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.