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The WebMILS Project
WebMILS References The final report of the National Academies' Committee on Monitoring International Labor Standards, Monitoring International Labor Standards: Techniques and Sources of Information, is cited frequently within WebMILS and this page offers a chapter-by-chapter list of references from this report. Where available online, hyperlinks will take the reader to the cited source. The report may be purchased or viewed online by visiting: http://www.nap.edu/books/0309091349/html/ Chapter 1 Elliot, K.A. (2004). Labor Standards and the free trade area of the Americas. In A. Estevedeordal, D. Rodrik, A. Taylor, and A. Velasco (Eds.), FTAA and beyond: Prospects for integration in the Americas. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. Engerman, S. (2003). The history and political economy of international labor standards. In K. Basu, H. Horn, L. Raman, and J. Shapiro (Eds.), International labor standards: History, theory and policy options. Malden, MA: Blackwell. Freedom House. (2003). Freedom house country ratings. [October 8, 2003] Huberman, M. (2002). International labor standards and market integration before 1913: A race to the top. Paper prepared for Trinity College Conference on The Political Economy of Globalization: Can the Past Inform the Present. Dublin, Ireland. International Labour Organization. (2000). Your voice at work: Global report under the follow-up to the ILO declaration on fundamental principles and rights at work. Geneva: International Labor Office. International Labour Organization. (2003). Ratifications of the ILO fundamental conventions. [October 7, 2003] Jones, E.B. (1963). New estimates of hours of work per week and hourly earnings, 1900-1957. Review of Economics and Statistics, 45(4), 374-385. National Research Council. (2003). Monitoring international labor standards: Quality of Information, summary of a workshop. M. Hilton (Ed.), Division of Behavioral and Social Sciences and Education and Policy and Global Affairs Division. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development. (2000). International trade and core labour standards. Paris: Author. Chapter 2 Advisory Committee on Labor Diplomacy. (2000). A world of decent work: Labor diplomacy for the new century. Report of the Advisory Committee on Labor Diplomacy to the Secretary of State and the President of the United States. Bales, K. (2002, July). International labor standards: Quality of information and measures in progress in combating forced labor. Paper prepared for the National Research Council Workshop on International Labor Standards: Quality of Information and Measures of Progress. Washington, DC. Bolle, M.J. (2000). China and the WTO: Labor issues. Washington, DC: Congressional Research Service. Compa, L. (2002, July). Assessing assessments: A survey of efforts to measure countries' compliance with freedom of association standards. Paper prepared for the National Research Council Workshop on International Labor Standards: Quality of Information and Measures of Progress. Washington, DC. Gleditsch, N.P., Wallensteen, P., Eriksson, M., Sollenberg, M., and Strand, H. (2001, June). Armed conflict 1946-2000: A new dataset. Paper presented at the Euroconference on Identifying Wars: Systemic Conflict Research and its Utility in Conflict Resolution and Prevention, Uppsala, Sweden. Human Rights Watch. (2000). Fingers to the bone: United States failure to protect child farmworkers. New York, NY: Author. Human Rights Watch. (2002a). From the household to the factory: Sex discrimination in the Guatemala labor force. New York, NY: Author. Human Rights Watch. (2002b). Tainted harvest: Child labor and obstacles to organizing on Ecuador's banana plantations. New York, NY: Author. International Labour Organization. (2000). Your voice at work: Global report under the follow-up to the ILO Declaration on Fundamental Principles and Rights at Work. Geneva: International Labour Office. International Labour Organization. (2001). Stopping forced labor: Global report under the follow-up to the ILO Declaration on Fundamental Principles and Rights at Work. Geneva: International Labour Office. International Labour Organization. (2002). A future without child labor: Global report under the follow-up to the ILO Declaration on Fundamental Principles and Rights at Work. Geneva: International Labour Office. International Labour Organization. (2003). Time for equality at work: Global report under the follow-up to the ILO Declaration on Fundamental Principles and Rights at Work. Geneva: International Labour Office. International Labour Rights Fund. (2003). A report on sexual harassment in the workplace in Mexico. Washington, DC: Author. Manyin, M., Lum, L., McHugh, L.B., Nguyen, P.K., and Zeldin, W. (2001). Vietnam's labor rights regime: An assessment. (Congressional Research Service Report). Washington, DC: Penny Hill Press. U.N. Verification Mission in Guatemala. (2002, January 18). Informe de MINUGUA para el grupo consultivo sobre Guatemala. U.S. Department of Labor. (1996). The apparel industry and codes of conduct: A solution to the international child labor problem? Washington, DC: Bureau of International Labor Affairs. Weisband, E., and Colvin, C.J. (2000). An empirical analysis of international confederation of free trade unions annual surveys. Human Rights Quarterly, 22(1), 167-186. World Bank. (2003). Core labor standards toolkit-Diagnosing core labor standards in the CAS. Zimmerman, J.M. (1991). The Overseas Private Investment Corporation and worker rights: The loss of role models for employment standards in the foreign workplace. Hastings International and Comparative Law Review, 14, 603-609.Arthurs, H. (2001). Reinventing labor law for the global economy: The Benjamin Aaron lecture. Berkeley Journal of Employment and Labor Law, 22(2), 271-294. Chapter 3 Ascoly, N., Oldenziel, J., and Zeldenrust, I. (2001, May). Overview of recent developments on monitoring and verification in the garment and sportswear industry in Europe. Amsterdam: SOMO-Centre for Research on Multinational Corporations. Ayres, I., and Braithwaite, J. (1992). Responsive regulation: Transcending the deregulation debate. Oxford, England: Oxford University Press. Bartley, T. (2001, August). The professionalization of scrutiny: The rise of labor-standards monitoring organizations. Paper presented at the American Sociological Association 2001 conference, Anaheim, CA. Bendell, J. (2001, September). Towards participatory workplace appraisal: Report from a focus group of women banana workers. Bath, England: New Academy of Business. Benjamin, M. (1998). What's fair about the Fair Labor Association (FLA)? Bernstein, A. (2001, November 19). Do-it-yourself labor standards: While the WTO dickers companies are writing the rules. Block, R., Roberts, K., Ozeki, C., and Roomkin, M. (2001, April). Models of international labor standards. Industrial Relations, 40(2), 258-292. Braithwaite, J., and Drahos, P. (2000). Global business regulation. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press. Brill, L. (2002). Can codes of conduct help home-based workers: A test case for ethical trade? Chapter 9 in R. Jenkins, R. Pearson, and G. Seyfang (Eds.), Corporate responsibility and labour rights: Codes of conduct in the global economy. London: Earthscan. Brown, G. (2001). Maquiladora health and safety support network newsletter, Fall. Brown Daily Herald. (2000, April 3). Nike refuses to comply with WRC, cancels U. contract. Cashore, B. (2002). Legitimacy and the privatization of environmental governance: How non state market-driven (NSMD) governance systems gain rule making authority. Governance, 15(4), 503-529. Chan, A. (2001). China's workers under assault: The exploitation of labor in a globalizing economy. Armonk, NY: M.E. Sharpe. Clean Clothes Campaign. (2001). Newsletter (multiple issues). Compa, L. (2001, July 2). Wary allies. The American Prospect, 12(12), p. 30. Compa, L., and Hinchliffe-Darricarrere, T. (1995). Enforcing international labor rights through corporate codes of conduct. Columbia Journal of Transnational Law, 33, 663. Connor, T. (2001a). Still waiting for Nike to do it: Nike's labor practices in the three years since CEO Phil Knight's speech to the National Press Club. San Francisco: Global Exchange. Connor, T. (2001b). Can advocacy-led certification systems transform global corporate practices? Evidence and some theory. (Working Paper Series No. 21). Amherst, MA: Political Economy Research Institute. Cutler, C., Haufler, V., and Porter, T. (1999). Private authority in international politics. Albany: SUNY Press. Diller, J. (1999). A social conscience in the global marketplace? Labour dimensions of codes of conduct, social labeling, and investor initiatives. International Labour Review, 138. Douglas, W. (2001). Who's who in codes of conduct. New Economy Information Service. Elliott, K., and Freeman, R. (2001, January). White hats or Don Quixotes? Human rights vigilantes in the global economy. (NBER Working Paper No. W8102). New York, NY: National Bureau of Economic Research. Environics International. (1999, May). The millenium poll on corporate social responsibility. Esbenshade, J. (2000). Globalization and resistance in the apparel industry: The struggle over monitoring. Paper presented at the American Sociological Association, Washington, DC. Esbenshade, J. (2001). The social accountability contract: Private monitoring from Los Angeles to the global apparel industry. Labor Studies Journal, spring. Ethical Trading Initiative. (2001). Learning our trade: Annual report 2000-2001. London: Author. Evans, P. (1997). The eclipse of the state? Reflections on stateness in an era of globalization. World Politics, 50(1). Fair Labor Association. (2003a). Licensee help center: Collegiate licensee program requirements. Fair Labor Association. (2003b, July 31). Two guatemalan apparel factories to remain open. Freeman, R. (1994). A hard-headed look at labour standards. In W. Sengenberger and D. Campbell (Eds.), International labour standards and economic interdependence. Geneva: International Labour Office. Fung, A., O'Rourke, D., and Sabel, C. (2001). Can we put an end to sweatshops? Boston: Beacon Press. Gereffi, G., Garcia-Johnson, R., and Sasser, E. (2001). The NGO-industrial complex. Foreign Policy, July-August, 56-65. Gonzalez, D. (2003, April 4). Latin sweatshops pressed by U.S. campus power. The New York Times, p. A3. Haufler, V. (2001). A public role for the private sector: Industry self-monitoring in a global economy. Washington, DC: Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. Herrnstadt, O. (2001). Voluntary corporate codes of conduct: What's missing. The Labor Lawyer, 16, 349-370. Hughes, S., and Wilkinson, R. (1998). International labour standards and world trade: No role for the world trade organization? New Political Economy, 3, 375-389. International Labor Affairs Bureau. (1996). The apparel industry and codes of conduct: A solution to the international child labor problem? Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Labor. International Labour Organization. (1998). Overview of global developments and office activities concerning codes of conduct, social labeling, and other private sector initiatives addressing labour issues. Geneva: International Labour Office. Jeffcott, B., and Yanz, L. (1999, October 18). Voluntary codes of conduct: Do they strengthen or undermine government monitoring and worker organizing? Maquila Solidarity Network. Jeffcott, B., and Yanz, L. (2000). Shopping for the right code: What's to be gained from codes of conduct? In R. Thamotheram (Ed.), Visions of ethical sourcing. London: Financial Times Prentice Hall. Justice, D. (2001). The new codes of conduct and the social partners. International confederation of free trade unions. Kearney, N. (2000). Letter to the editor. Financial Times of London, January 31. Knill, C., and Lehmkuhl, D. (2002). Private actors and the state: Internationalization and changing patterns of governance. Governance, 15(1), 44-63. Labour Rights in China. (1999, June). No illusions: Against the global cosmetic SA8000. Hong Kong: Author. Lee, E. (1997). Globalization and labour standards: A review of issues. International Labour Review, 136(2). Lipschutz, R. (2000, December). Monitoring for the rest of us: Global civil society, social monitoring, and national impacts. Paper prepared for Workshop on Human Rights and Globalization, University of California, Santa Cruz. Liubicic, R. (1998). Corporate codes of conduct and product labeling schemes: The limits and possibilities of promoting international labor rights through private initiatives. Law and Policy in International Business, 30(1), 111-158. Maitland, A. (2003). Big brands come clean on sweatshop labor. The Financial Times, June 10. Maquila Solidarity Network. (2001a). The changing terrain in the codes of conduct debate. Maquila Solidarity Network. (2001b). Codes memo, issues number 3-9. Maquila Solidarity Network. (2003a, June). Codes memo: Number 14. Maquila Solidarity Network. (2003b). Maquila network update: September Maskus, K. (1997). Should core labor standards be imposed through international trade policy? (Working Paper No. 1817). Washington, DC: World Bank Development Research Group. Nadvi, K., and Kazmi, S. (2001). Global standards and local responses. (Working paper). Sussex, England: Institute for Development Studies. Nadvi, K., and Wältring, F. (2001). Making sense of global standards. (Draft IDS-INEP working paper). Sussex, England: Institute for Development Studies. Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development. (1991). Guidelines for multinational enterprises. Annex 1 to the Declaration on International Investment and Multinational Enterprises. Paris: Author. Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development. (1999). Codes of corporate conduct: An inventory. Paris: Trade Directorate. O'Rourke, D. (2002). Monitoring the monitors: A critique of corporate third-party labor monitoring. In R. Jenkins, R. Pearson, and G. Seyfang (Eds.), Corporate responsibility and ethical trade: Codes of conduct in the global economy. London: Earthscan. Pearson, R., and Seyfang, G. (2002). Codes of conduct as enclave social policy. In R. Jenkins, R. Pearson, and G. Seyfang (Eds.). Corporate responsibility and ethical trade: Codes of conduct in the global economy. London: Earthscan. Posner, M., and Nolan, J. (2002). Can codes of conduct play a role in promoting workers rights? Paper presented at the Stanford Law School Conference on International Labor Standards, May 21. Quinteros, C. (2001, October). Independent monitoring seen from the central American region. Paper prepared for the SOMO Conference: From Codes to Compliance, Brussels. Reinicke, W. (1998). Global public policy: Governing without government? Washington, DC: Brookings Institution Press. Ross, R. (2001). Sweatshop police. The Nation, September 3, pp. 6-7. Sabel, C. (1994). Learning by monitoring: The institutions of economic development. In N. Smelser and R. Swedberg (Eds.). Handbook of economic sociology (pp. 137-165). Princeton, NJ: Princeton-Sage. Sethi, S.P. (2003). Setting global standards: Guidelines for creating codes of conduct in multinational corporations. Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons. Schmidt, V. (1995). The new world order incorporated: The rise of business and the decline of the nation state. Daedalus, 124(2), 75-106. Strange, S. (1996). The retreat of the state. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press. Teubner, G. (1983). Substantive and reflexive elements in modern law. Law and Society Review, 17(239). van Tulder, R., and Kolk, A. (2001). Multinationality and corporate ethics: Codes of conduct in the sporting goods industry. Journal of International Business Studies, 32(2), 267-283. Varley, P. (1998). The sweatshop quandary: Corporate responsibility on the global frontier. Washington, DC: Investor Responsibility Research Center. Verite. (2002). Emerging markets research project year-end report. Prepared for the California Public Employee Retirement System. Amherst, MA: Author. Wach, H., and Nadvi, K. (2000). Global labour and social standards and their implications for developing country producers: A bibliographic overview. (Working paper). Sussex, England: Institute for Development Studies. Wick, I. (2001). Workers' tool or PR ploy: A guide to codes of international labour practice. Bonn, Germany: Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung. Yanz, L., and Jeffcott, B. (1999, September). Codes of conduct: From corporate responsibility to social accountability. Maquila Solidarity Network. Chapter 4 Aidt, T., and Tzannatos, Z. (2002). Unions and collective bargaining: Economic effects in a global environment. Washington, DC: World Bank. Commission for Labor Cooperation. (2000). Labor relations law in North America. Washington, DC: Secretariat of the North American Agreement on Labor Cooperation. Compa, L. (2000). Unfair advantage: Workers freedom of association in the United States under international human rights standards. Washington, DC: Human Rights Watch. Compa, L. (2002, July). Assessing assessments: A survey of efforts to measure countries' compliance with freedom of association standards. Paper prepared for the National Research Council Workshop on International Labor Standards: Quality of Information and Measures of Progress. Washington, DC. Donnelly, J. (1995). Universal human rights in theory and practice. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press. Frank, V. (2002). The elusive goal in democratic Chile: Reforming the Pinochet labor legislation. Latin American Politics and Society, 44(Spring), 35. Freedom House. (2003). Freedom in the world 2003: Freedom gains despite global threats. Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littlefield. Freeman, R.B., and Rogers, J. (1999). What workers want. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press. Human Rights Watch. (1999a). The Enron Corporation: Corporate complicity in human rights violations. Washington, DC: Author. Human Rights Watch. (1999b). The price of oil: Corporate responsibility and human rights violations in Nigeria's oil producing communities. Washington, DC: Author. Human Rights Watch. (2003). Human Rights Watch world report 2003. Washington, DC: Author. International Confederation of Free Trade Unions. (2002). Annual survey of violations of trade union rights. International Confederation of Free Trade Unions. (2003a, June). Annual survey of violations of trade union rights. International Confederation of Free Trade Unions. (2003b). ICFTU: What it is, what it does. International Confederation of Free Trade Unions. (2003c). Country reports: WTO and labour standards. International Labour Organization. (1983). Freedom of association and collective bargaining. (General Survey of the Committee of Experts). Geneva: International Labour Office. International Labour Organization. (1991). Complaint against the government of the United States of America presented by the AFL-CIO. (Report No. 278, Case No. 1543). Geneva: International Labour Office, Committee on Freedom of Association. International Labour Organization. (1994). Freedom of association and collective bargaining. 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(2002b, July). Remarks to the committee on monitoring international labor standards. Presented to the National Research Council Workshop on International Labor Standards: Quality of Information and Measures of Progress. Washington, DC. Steiner, H., and Alston, P. (1996). International human rights in context. Oxford, England: Oxford University Press. Swepston, L. (1998). Human rights law and freedom of association: Development through ILO supervision. International Labour Review, 137(2). Tajgman, D., and Curtis, K. (2000). Freedom of association: A user's guide. Geneva: International Labour Office. U.S. Department of Labor. (1996). The apparel industry and codes of conduct: A solution to the international child labor problem? Washington, DC: Author, International Labor Affairs Bureau. U.S. Department of State. (2001). Human rights instruction package (unpublished memo). Washington, DC: Author, Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labor. World Bank. (1995). 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London: Anti-Slavery International. Scholliers, P. (1995). Grown-ups, boys and girls in the Ghent cotton industry: The Voortman Mills, 1835-1914. Social History, 20(2), 201-218. Sephiri, T., and Groenningsaeter, A. (2003, March). Working conditions in Southern Africa: Child labor and collective bargaining. Presentation for the Forum on Monitoring International Labor Standards. Pretoria, South Africa. Srivastava, J. (2003). South Asia annual report. Jaipur, India: Centre for International Trade, Economics and Environment. United Nations. (1996). World population prospects 1950-2050:1996 revision. New York, NY: Author, Population Division. U.S. Department of Labor. (2000). By the sweat and toil of children (Volume VI): An economic consideration of child labor. Washington, DC: Bureau of International Labor Affairs. U.S. Department of Labor. (2002). The U.S. Department of Labor's 2001 findings on the worst forms of child labor. Washington, DC: Bureau of International Labor Affairs. Weiner, M. (1991). The child and the state in India: Child labor and education policy in comparative perspective. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. Chapter 7 International Labour Organization. (1999). Key indicators of the labour market. Geneva: International Labour Office. International Labour Organization. (2001). An instrument of accountability ILO/AIDS: A global plan and a new code of practice. World of Work-The Magazine of the ILO, 40. International Labour Organization. (2003). Time for equality at work. Report of the director-general under the Follow-up to the Declaration on Fundamental Principles and Rights at Work. Geneva: International Labour Office. National Research Council. (2003). Monitoring international labor standards: Quality of information, summary of a workshop. M. Hilton (Ed.), Division of Behavioral and Social Sciences and Education. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. Rama, M., and Artecona, R. (2002, July). A database of labor market indicators across countries. Paper prepared for the National Research Council Workshop on International Labor Standards: Quality of Information and Measures of Progress. Washington, DC. Thomas, C. (2002, July). Information sources and measures of international labour standards on discrimination (discussion draft). Paper prepared for the National Research Council Workshop on International Labor Standards: Quality of Information and Measures of Progress. Washington, DC. United Nations. (2000). The world's women 2000: Trends and statistics. New York, NY: Author, Department of Economic and Social Affairs, Statistics Division. U.N. Development Fund for Women. (2003). Progress of the world's women 2002: Gender equality and the millennium development goals. New York, NY: Author. U.N. Development Programme. (1995). Human development report. New York, NY: Author. World Bank. (2001, January). 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