Gender Policy Statement – CCC International Secretariat
The Clean Clothes Campaign (CCC) is committed to improving the lives and working conditions of all workers in the global garment and sportswear industry, the vast majority of whom are women. In promoting workers’ rights, the CCC is committed to challenging the gender inequality and sex discrimination faced by garment workers.
Within the garment industry women are concentrated in unskilled, low-paid, precarious and often casual or informal work, including home-based work. Their work, even when skilled, is undervalued or unrecognised, and few workers have access to decent working conditions or training.
Women workers have little voice and influence in their workplaces. They are often denied the right to join a union or to organise. The unequal power of women garment workers in relation to men and their employers, both at work and in the community, is at the heart of the injustices and deprivations they experience.
Women garment workers tend to be in a vulnerable position especially if they are young, migrant, or poorly educated. They often work in unsafe and unhealthy conditions. They lack rights at work, including to pregnancy and maternity protection. The long hours typical for garment industry work often come into conflict with women's ability to fulfil the responsibilities they are expected to shoulder in their families and communities.
The CCC recognises that workers’ rights must take into account the vital role women play in households and communities around the world to support and care for others; unpaid work that they do in addition to their role as paid workers.
The CCC aims to help women garment workers raise their voices and achieve positive change in their lives.
With the aim of improving conditions for garment workers and supporting their empowerment, the CCC campaigns for the full implementation of human rights and ILO labour standards in the garment and sportswear supply chain, especially those of freedom of association and freedom from discrimination, and strives to make consumers aware of the conditions in which their clothes and sports shoes are made and the role of women workers in the production process.
To make these commitments a reality the CCC will:
take gender perspectives into account in all its work and address issues influenced by gender;
include gender considerations in all its activities, particularly policy and campaign work, and highlight gender discrimination experienced by women workers;
work to make the experiences, needs, and struggles of women workers at all levels of garment production visible, particularly those at the bottom of supply chains, such as home-based workers, and push for recognition of their status as workers;
pursue complementary legal and campaign strategies to expand the rights of women working in the garment industry;
monitor global social and economic trends, as well as supply chain practices, and raise awareness of their impact on women working in the garment industry;
To put our aspirations into practice the CCC will:
foster solidarity and promote links between the women who buy clothes, the women who produce clothes and the women who sell clothes;
collaborate with the international labour movement and with women’s organisations to win rights for women workers and empower women to join and take leadership positions in unions, community and workers’ organisations;
engage with NGOs, the media and research communities to focus attention on the working conditions of women working in the garment and sportswear industry;
urge companies and supply chain employers to ensure that all garment workers can access their human and legal rights, particularly women’s rights to Decent Work and equal pay;
press the international and policy communities, as well as national governments, to take greater account of the importance of Decent Work and international labour standards in programmes aiming to economically empower women in garment producing countries;
promote understanding and learning on gender issues so that policy and priorities reflect the commitment to make the world a better place for women working in the garment and sportswear value chain;
increase awareness among consumers, especially young women, of the relationship between the clothes they buy and the lives of the women workers who produce them, as well as the benefits of ethical consumerism and ‘slow’ fashion which values quality of production over quantity;
provide resources to assist the CCC network and other stakeholders to develop effective strategies to challenge gender inequality;
conduct research using a gender-sensitive approach, including in research design, methodologies, and analysis, producing outputs that include gender-disaggregated statistics and findings;
ensure that our own internal practices and ways of working reflect our commitment to gender equality.
Rights for women and girls, including reproductive rights, are recognised by the UN as a human right. The CCC will do all in its power to make these rights a reality for the women working in the garment and sportswear industry.
We will be bold, daring and ambitious in our pursuit of social and economic justice for women garment workers.
Vancouver Olympics: Sportswear Brands in Trouble
Monday, 11 January 2010 11:06
Despite making positive statements at the time of the 2008 Olympics about cleaning up an industry rife with rights violations, major sportswear brands have taken little action since to improve wages and working conditions for the workers who produce their goods. On the eve of the 2010 Winter Olympics the CCC and other labour rights organisations have launched a new website to rate the commitments companies have made to implement real change for sportswear workers.
“We’ve taken stock of what companies like Nike, adidas, Puma and others have done to deal with issues like poverty wages and repression of the right to unionise and it’s clear that almost no steps forward have been made since Beijing 2008,” said Jeroen Merk of the CCC International Secretariat. “Campaigners around the world are reaching out to the public to put pressure on the brands to finally do something about this sorry state of affairs.”
The CCC and other labour rights organisations active in the Play Fair campaign have launched a website and online advertising campaign to draw attention to the failure of the sportswear industry to sufficiently address ongoing labour problems in their production supply chains. Take action and contact the sportswear brands!
Sportswear companies have been rated based on their response to a series of demands put forward by the Play Fair 2008 campaign. To read the company ratings and view the ads, see www.clearingthehurdles.org.
Playfair 2012 launches campaign for an ethical London Olympics
Monday, 01 March 2010 10:38
On Saturday 27 february, As the Olympic torch was handed on from this year's Winter Olympics in Vancouver to London, the Playfair 2012 coalition launched a campaign for an ethical London Games.
Playfair 2012 is co-ordinated by the TUC and Labour Behind the Label (the UK Clean Clothes Campaign) http://www.labourbehindthelabel.org/ and involves unions and various campaigning organisations.
The coalition wants the organisers of the London Olympics to ensure that workers making sportswear for the 2012 Games won't be working in appalling and degrading conditions, and that all Olympic-branded goods will be ethically produced.
The campaign website http://www.playfair2012.org.uk/ sets out the standards the coalition expects from the London 2012 Games organisers, the International Olympic Committee (IOC) and sportswear brands, and explains how individuals can get involved in the campaign. There is also a resources section with reports and video clips.
Millions of people are employed in the global supply chains that produce kits for Olympic teams, and the sportswear and souvenirs available on our high streets. Evidence shows that the sportswear industry and Olympic movement have a poor track record on workers' rights, says the campaign. Playfair 2008 research published before the Beijing Games found workers employed by Adidas suppliers in China were making sports shoes that retail for upwards of £50 a pair for just £20 per month, and others working 80 hours a week stitching footballs. In another factory producing stationery, children as young as 12 years old were being forced to work 15 hours a day.
TUC General Secretary Brendan Barber said: "Delivering a legacy for London was at the heart of the Government's successful Olympic bid. And what better legacy than a commitment to end the exploitation and abuse involved in the sportswear and athletic footwear industries? We want London 2012 to raise the bar on workers' rights throughout Olympic supply chains."
A Nutritious Meal Shouldn’t be a Luxury
Sunday, 07 March 2010 00:00
For women working in the garment industry and their families, good food is just that -- not a given, but something they have to think long and hard about buying. When you’re paid poverty wages malnutrition is a way of life -- along with unsafe housing, lack of clean drinking water and limited access to health care and education.
This year, on March 8th, International Women's Day, stand with the women of the garment industry and support their call for better wages. Add your voice to theirs: send a message to major international retailers asking them to implement a living wage in their garment production chains.
See this short video message from Indonesian garment union leader Emelia Yanti Mala Dewi Seehan about the need to secure a living wage.
Women are the backbone of the global garment industry and they deserve to be paid a wage that allows them and their families to live in dignity. By taking action you can help make that a reality! Please FORWARD this message to colleagues, organisations, friends and family and encourage them to take action as well.
See how major sportswear brands rate on workers' rights
Monday, 01 March 2010 14:22
We’ve challenged sportswear brands to take a series of actions to overcome four major hurdles that block progress on worker rights in the sportswear industry. At this website you can find out how they have responded.
In response to protests about working conditions in their supply factories, some sportswear brands have developed labour rights monitoring and compliance programs and taken action on a number of issues and cases. Despite these efforts, substantial violations of worker rights and poverty wages are still the norm for workers in the sportswear industry. Just before the Beijing Olympics in 2008, Play Fair and The Maquila Solidarity Network (MSN) published a report called Clearing the Hurdles: Steps to improving working conditions in the global sportswear industry.
In this website - http://www.clearingthehurdles.org/ - the Play Fair Campaign and MSN present responses from Nike, adidas, Pentland, Puma, Lotto, New Balance, Asics and Mizuno on their willingness to meet 36 specific targets to overcome the four hurdles facing workers in the sportswear industry.