2017
DOI: 10.1111/rego.12162
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Governance gaps in eradicating forced labor: From global to domestic supply chains

Abstract: A growing body of scholarship analyzes the emergence and resilience of forced labor in developing countries within global value chains. However, little is known about how forced labor arises within domestic supply chains concentrated within national borders, producing products for domestic consumption. We conduct one of the first studies of forced labor in domestic supply chains, through a cross-industry comparison of the regulatory gaps surrounding forced labor in the United Kingdom. We find that understandin… Show more

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Cited by 99 publications
(107 citation statements)
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References 43 publications
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“…Stevenson and Cole (2018) note how companies tend to put greater emphasis "on setting new standards and avoiding risks than on remediation" (p. 90). Crane et al (2019) stress the problematic lack of "coordination between public and private initiatives" (p. 102). On the contrary, substantive compliance is characterized by openness to governmental and external monitoring processes; legal activism and strong engagement with suppliers; real efforts to embed policies into practice; and adherence to the radical prohibition of slavery even when it conflicts with organizational interests.…”
Section: Managerialization and Legalization Processes As Drivers Of Omentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Stevenson and Cole (2018) note how companies tend to put greater emphasis "on setting new standards and avoiding risks than on remediation" (p. 90). Crane et al (2019) stress the problematic lack of "coordination between public and private initiatives" (p. 102). On the contrary, substantive compliance is characterized by openness to governmental and external monitoring processes; legal activism and strong engagement with suppliers; real efforts to embed policies into practice; and adherence to the radical prohibition of slavery even when it conflicts with organizational interests.…”
Section: Managerialization and Legalization Processes As Drivers Of Omentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Recent legislation in a range of countries has introduced this discourse into SCM by requiring companies to disclose and address the risks of modern slavery in their supply chains (see Gold, Trautrims & Trodd, ; New, ; Stevenson & Cole, ). However, progress is slow, with observers arguing that stronger sanctions are needed to enforce quicker and greater compliance (e.g., Crane et al, ). In this section, we use discourse analysis to illuminate how creating new meanings at the intersection of the discourses of modern slavery and risk may help to increase compliance.…”
Section: Discourse Analysis and Supply Chain Managementmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…66 The CIW was able to draw on the national attention on combatting trafficking, together with the growing recognition that the agricultural sector in Florida was a site of forced labour, to give force to its claim for improving labour conditions. 67 Moreover, they had a convincing proposal for the means to achieve the elimination of forced labour on Florida's farms.…”
Section: B a Proximate Anti-trafficking Fieldmentioning
confidence: 99%