Skip to main content
Home
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • YouTube
  • Instagram
  • Blog
  • Contact
  • de
animals Animals
climate Climate Crisis
Conflict Regions
Culture
Democracy
Development & Aid
Economy
Education
energy Energy
environment Environment
Exemplary People
food Food & Agriculture
Globalization
Health
Human Rights
Men
military Military
nature Nature
News Media
nuclear weapons Nuclear Disarmament
Peace
Politics
Religions
Social Justice
Sustainability
Women
Youth
Useful Tools
Real News
Events

Sweatshops in Bangladesh

  1. Home
  2. Human Rights
  3. Human Rights by COUNTRY
  4. South East Asia
  5. Bangladesh
Suggest a link
Cancel
  • Bangladesh Accord389480
  • Industriall Union - Action on Bangladesh389485
  • Clean Clothes Campaigns - Rana Plaza389479
  • Worker Rights Consortium - International Safety Accord / Bangladesh389483
  • Accord on Fire and Building Safety in Bangladesh - Wikipedia389481
  • Documentary: The Machinists389453
  • Documentary: Fashion Factories Undercover - Daily Motion389456
  • Sanctions threat looms over Bangladesh’s garment sector ahead of elections - Al Jazeera 22.12.23390330
  • Is Your Brand Paying Its Share to Reduce Bangladesh Workers’ Wage Despair? - HRW 16.11.23384325
  • Disgraceful £93 a month: Bangladesh government ignores the seperate demands of workers - Labour Behind the Label 10.11.23389432
  • Why Bangladesh’s Ongoing Garment Workers’ Strike Is a Feminist Issue - The Swaddle 08.11.23389444
  • UK union leaders call for Bangladesh minimum wage boost and condemn police violence - Labour Behind the Label 01.11.23389433
  • Failure to lift 'exploitative' wages tests fashion firms’ commitment to human rights - Reuters 03.08.23389443
  • Documentary: The Dark Side of Bangladesh's Garment Industry - Real Stories 09.07.23389436
  • The lethal price of sweatshop development - IPS 11.05.23389421
  • The World Has Learned the Wrong Lessons From the Rana Plaza Disaster - Jacobin 26.04.23389460
  • Best&Less accused of putting profit before Bangladesh workers by failing to sign safety accord - Guardian 25.04.23389488
  • Armedangels launches charity t-shirt to mark Rana Plaza disaster’s 10 year-anniversary - Boutique Magazine 25.04.23389478
  • 10 years after Bangladesh factory collapse, fast fashion still comes with deadly risks - CNA 25.04.23389431
  • Abuses ‘still rife’: 10 years on from Bangladesh’s Rana Plaza disaster - Guardian 24.04.23342561
  • 10 Years After Rana Plaza, Fast Fashion's Complex Supply Chains Still Put Workers at Risk - CD 24.04.23342552
  • The True Cost of a $12 T-Shirt - NY Times 24.04.23389476
  • A Decade After the Rana Plaza Collapse, Garment Workers Are Still Exploited - Bloomberg 19.04.23389458
  • Decade After Rana Plaza, Safety Flaws Persist - HRW 17.04.23341588
  • Is anti-‘sweatshop’ activism making Bangladeshis poorer? - The Hill 15.04.23389420
  • 10 Years since Rana Plaza, the Accord has some bold expansion plans - Just Style 28.03.23389482
  • Marking the tenth anniversary of the Rana Plaza factory collapse - No Sweat 17.03.23389468
  • Once known for its sweatshops, Bangladesh is slowly moving towards sustainable production - Scroll 10.03.23389425
  • Lidl, Zara’s owner, H&M and Next ‘paid Bangladesh suppliers less than production cost’ - Guardian 11.01.23324237
  • Made in Bangladesh, a label of reliance - Textile Today 21.11.22389491
  • Made in Bangladesh: The journey of a brand - TBS News 13.11.22389492
  • Bangladesh’s garment sector faces energy, demand crises - Al Jazeera 02.08.22298262
  • Anti-Sweatshop Activism and the Safety-Employment Tradeoff: Evidence from Bangladesh's Rana Plaza Disaster - SSRN 24.06.22389439
  • Bangladesh garment workers, retailers extend workers’ safety pact - Al Jazeera 26.08.21253858
  • International brands sign a new accord to protect garment workers in Bangladesh. - NY Times 25.08.21389484
  • The Bangladesh Accord is set to expire. Here’s what’s at risk - Vogue 29.07.21389487
  • The Bangladesh Accord: Unfinished business? - PILPG 12.07.21389486
  • Bangladesh factory fire kills at least 52 people - Guardian 09.07.21250006
  • Bangladesh Factory Fire Kills Dozens of Workers Locked Inside - CD 09.07.21250007
  • Bangladesh clothing factory safety deal in danger, warn unions - Guardian 22.04.21250010
  • Years after the Rana Plaza tragedy, Bangladesh’s garment workers are still bottom of the pile - The Conversation 22.04.21250008
  • Made in Bangladesh: The Unethical Treatment of Sweatshop Workers - Samira Hossain, 2021389426
  • Political Reasons Why Sweatshops Still Exist in Bangladesh - Reverie 28.12.20389419
  • 'I thought about killing my children': the desperate Bangladesh garment workers fighting for pay - Guardian 10.12.20250009
  • Three ways garment workers in Bangladesh are struggling - Borgen Project 06.10.20389427
  • Seven years after Rana Plaza, 'brands still do not value human lives' - Fashionista 24.04.20389473
  • The evolving politics of labour standards in Bangladesh: taking stock and looking forward - LSE, 2020389442
  • After Rana Plaza: are workers in clothing factories better off? - UNSW 25.09.19389465
  • Rana Plaza workers help launch T-shirt that fights sweatshops - Morning Star 24.04.19389475
  • Major brands fail to join Bangladesh factory safety accord - Reuters 01.06.18389490
  • What’s Changed (and What Hasn’t) Since the Rana Plaza Nightmare - Open Society Foundations 24.04.18389461
  • Five years after Rana Plaza disaster, are Asia’s sweatshops a thing of the past? - SCMP 22.04.18389472
  • An Accident in History - New Labour Forum 17.04.18389471
  • Fighting Bangladesh’s Sweatshops - CFR 18.01.17389424
  • The lives behind the label - New Internationalist 17150935
  • Crammed into squalid factories to produce clothes for the West on just 20p a day, the children forced to work in horrific unregulated workshops of Bangladesh - Daily Mail 30…389422
  • Bangladeshi Sweatshops Continue to Imperil Workers’ Lives - Vice 20.09.15389430
  • Journal: Starving for Justice: Bangladeshi Garment Workers in a ‘Post-Rana Plaza’ World - Cambridge 21.07.15389469
  • A look at child labor inside a garment factory in Bangladesh - World Vision 10.06.15389445
  • Two years ago, 1,129 people died in a Bangladesh factory collapse. The problems still haven’t been fixed - Washington Post 23.04.15389467
  • Journal: Starving for Justice: Bangladeshi Garment Workers in a 'Post-Rana Plaza' World - JSTOR, 2015389463
  • Work It! The New Face of Labor in Fashion - Dissent 05/14150936
  • Bangladesh's Sweatshops: A Boycott Is Not the Answer - Pulitzer Center 25.04.14389438
  • The Bangladesh Factory Collapse: A Case for Intervention and Policy Change - Seven Pillars Institution 20.03.14389441
  • Regulation, Enforcement or Negligence: A Look into the Possible Causes of Continued Abuse within the Bangladesh Apparel Sweatshop Industry - Hamline University, 2014389440
  • The Effects of Globalization on Bangladesh's Ready-Made Garment Industry: The High Cost of Cheap Clothing - Brooklyn Works, 2014389447
  • The shirt on your back - Guardian, 2014389477
  • Supply chains and forced labour after Rana Plaza - Guardian 30.05.13389470
  • Eight top fashion retailers fail to sign Bangladesh safety accord - Guardian 14.05.13389489
  • Bangladesh disaster shows why we must urgently clean up global sweat shops - Conversation 06.05.13389429
  • Bangladesh tragedy forces retail rethink - Al Jazeera 03.05.13389437
  • Sweatshops In Bangladesh Improve The Lives Of Their Workers, And Boost Growth - Forbes 02.05.13389423
  • Factory collapse a 'wake-up call' for fashion industry - ABC 30.04.13389464
  • The Bangladesh factory tragedy and the moralists of sweatshop economics - Guardian 29.04.13389435
  • Sweatshops in Bangladesh - War on Want 28.01.11389418
  • Journal: The Rise of the Bangladesh Garment Industry: Globalization, Women Workers, and Voice - JSTOR, 2004389428
  • Documentary: Made in Bangladesh (Fault Lines, Al Jazeera)150937
  • The Broken Promise of Better Working Conditions: Labour precarity and Bangladesh’s garment industry - Orbis Irsa 389446
  • Bangladesh Sweatshops Case Study - IPL389452
  • About Us
    • FAQ
    • Endorsements
    • Privacy Policy
    • Disclaimer
    • Publisher
    • Press
  • Get Involved
    • What can I do?
    • Add a Link
    • Share knowledge
    • Donate
    • Contact us

Follow us

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • YouTube
  • Instagram
to top

share

Privacy
Details
Imprint | Privacy
Your selection from
The controller (Dr. Norbert Stute, Austria) would like to use the following services in order to process your personal data. Technologies such as cookies, localStorage, etc. can be used for personalization. This is not necessary for the use of the website, but allows us to interact with you more closely. If you wish, you can adjust or revoke your consent at any time via our privacy policy.
Other content (1 Service)
Integration of additional information
Switch to accept or reject the category Other content

X (Twitter)
Twitter International Unlimited Company, Ireland
All Detailsto X (Twitter)
All Detailsto X (Twitter)
Switch to accept or reject the service X (Twitter)
When accessing some sub-services of our website, additional personal services are processed. Processed data categories: technical connection data of the server access (IP address, date, time, requested page, browser information)data about the use of the website and the logging of clicks on individual elements. Purpose of processing: Selection of online advertising on other platforms, which are automatically selected using real-time bidding based on user behavior and provision of social media services. The legal basis for processing: Your consent according to Art. 6 (1) a GDPR. Data is transmitted: as joint controllers for Twitter International Unlimited Company, One Cumberland Place, Fenian Street Dublin 2, D02 AX07, Ireland. This may also mean a transfer of personal data to a country outside the European Union. The data is transmitted on the basis of your consent in accordance with Art. 6 Para. 1 lit a in conjunction with Art. 49 Para. 1 lit a GDPR. You were informed before you gave your consent that the USA does not have a level of data protection that corresponds to the standards of the EU. In particular, US secret services can access your data without you being informed and without you being able to take legal action against it.
Switch to accept or reject the service