Submitted by mick duncan on April 25, 2008 - 11:49am.
March 10, 2008
On Saturday March 8th, York University President Mamdouh Shoukri made a commitment to introduce a No Sweat licensing policy at the university by April. This promise came in response to a 45 hour sit-in by York students, members of the Sustainable Purchasing Coalition (SPC), a student group lobbying to reform York licensing and purchasing policies to more sustainable standards. If this pledge goes through as promised, York will bring the number of Canadian Universities with No Sweat policies to 17.
This Saturday 1 March as part of the national day of action against those sweatshop funding goons Topshop, People & Planeters will be gathering outside the Topshop on Oxford Street at 3pm.
These protests will be going on up and down the country but its really
important that
something goes off with a bang in London because it's the flagship store!
We are going to be holding a beautiful/horrifying banner, and be
handing out leaflets and
anything else we can do. We even have someone keen to protest while
wearing pants on
Submitted by mark osborn on January 15, 2008 - 4:42pm.
Including speaker tours by New Zealand union organiser, Mike Treen, on organising drives among fast-food workers and a young French union activist, Axel Persson involved in organising similar groups in Paris... 11-18 February at a campus near you...
Latest tour details here... Plus briefing on the Supersize My Pay campaign...
Submitted by mark osborn on June 9, 2007 - 4:10pm.
The Sheffield University Workers' Rights Coalition - the network initiated by No Sweat members and campaigners from other activist societies to fight for workers' rights on campus - finished the academic year with a signal of intent as its supporters distributed bulletins to students and staff that gave the low-down on the info that the WRC had gathered through months of dialogue with non-academic workers...
Submitted by mark osborn on June 2, 2007 - 8:08pm.
Smith College has recently become another in a long line of universities that will no longer be selling Coca-Cola products anywhere on campus. Following a three year student campaign, the university finally agreed that, due to Coke's deplorable record of human rights violations around the world, they would have Coca-Cola permanently removed from their campus. Great job to all the students at Smith!
Submitted by mark osborn on May 13, 2007 - 12:23pm.
No Sweat activists at the University of Sheffield have come together with campaigners from other groups and societies to launch the first 'living wage' campaign at a northern university.
Solidarity without borders:
Asylum, immigration controls and migrant workers' rights
1-2pm Wednesday 28 March
Winter Gardens, Blackpool
National Uunion of Students conference fringe meeting, sponsored by: Education Not for Sale, No One is Illegal, No Sweat, Sukula Family Must Stay campaign
Speakers:
Alphonsus Uche Okafor-Mefor, asylum-seeker and activist recently rescued from deportation by trade union action
Flores Sukula, Sukula Family Must Stay campaign
Sam Azad, International Federation of Iranian refugees and Nottingham Refugee Rights centre
Submitted by mark osborn on March 16, 2007 - 1:45pm.
The UK student group People and Planet have produced a bulletin for campaigners involved in FairTrade campaigning. The bulletin looks at cotton production and targets the Primark chain.
go here: http://peopleandplanet.org/tradejustice/highcost
and open the document 'High Street - High Cost'
Also on this page: 'White gold, the true cost of cotton', a useful 48 page report by the Economic Justice Foundation
Submitted by mark osborn on March 15, 2007 - 11:22am.
Sweatshops and Ethical Merchandise
An ordinary motion presented to a Union General Meeting on 27th February
2007
Proposed by Saffron Palmer
Seconded by Karen Lynch, Sophie Cartwright, Richard Byrne-Smith and Ric
Lander
THIS UNION NOTES
(i) That child labour, poverty wages, poor health and safety, forced
overtime, sexual abuse and violent harassment, especially against trade
unionists, have been revealed by reporters, trade unions and Government
investigators to be common features of sweatshop labour.
(ii) That many famous high street brands, including Nike, Gap, Adidas,
Last week, Mexican activist Andreas Aullet toured the country with No Sweat, with meetings in Brighton, Norwich, Cambridge, Nottingham, York, Manchester, Sheffield and London to dicuss the massive workers' and popular struggle which recently took place in Oaxaca. We are pleased to announce that Andreas is staying in the UK a few more days and will be speaking at Ruskin College in Oxford
Submitted by mark osborn on February 15, 2007 - 9:33pm.
How to organise a living wage struggle on campus, May 06
This briefing was written by Jeremy Anderson from Queen Mary’s college, East London. Activists at QM ran a model campaign in 2005-6, which resulted in a victory: a substantial wage rise for low-paid workers on campus.
The aim of this guide is to present some ideas about how to start a campaign to stamp out low pay on campus. It is one aspect of the work needed to guarantee ‘sweat-free campuses’ in the UK.
The Guardian’s report of the struggle at QM is here: QM Campaign victory
Submitted by mark osborn on February 15, 2007 - 9:31pm.
How to organise a No Sweat/Fair Trade fashion show
By Jill Hall based on experience from Durham Uni Fairtrade Fashion Show
Things to think about:
ï‚· Sources of clothing
ï‚· Funding
ï‚· Steering Committee & Co-ordination of event
ï‚· Venue
ï‚· Sound/lighting/music/choreography
ï‚· Models
ï‚· Rehearsals and where you will rehearse
ï‚· Publicity (posters/tickets/press)
ï‚· Charge on the door
ï‚· Do you want a photographer? Would you like someone to video record it?
ï‚· What else would you like to happen at the show?
Submitted by mark osborn on January 14, 2007 - 6:54pm.
How to organise a living wage struggle on campus, May 06
This briefing was written by Jeremy Anderson from Queen Mary’s college, East London. Activists at QM ran a model campaign in 2005-6, which resulted in a victory: a substantial wage rise for low-paid workers on campus.
The aim of this guide is to present some ideas about how to start a campaign to stamp out low pay on campus. It is one aspect of the work needed to guarantee ‘sweat-free campuses’ in the UK.
The Guardian’s report of the struggle at QM is here: QM Campaign victory
Submitted by mark osborn on January 11, 2007 - 1:50pm.
The second annual anti-sweatshop week of action will take place on UK campuses from 12-18 February. It is backed by National NUS. Here's an appeal from the No Sweat collective...
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