Wednesday, September 27, 2017

How is Life for the Women who Make our Clothes?


When we buy inexpensive clothes in our home countries), often someone else offshore has paid a high price in terms of miserable working conditions and wages.

We all know that, don´t we?

But do we really understand how life is for the women in the garment industry, in e.g., Cambodia?


We have now a chance to hear how 3 young Norwegian girls began to understand how hard life is for the garment workers who make our clothes, which we buy dead cheap in the western world.


In 2014, the 3 Norwegians, Anniken, Frida, and Ludwig were 17-20 years old and fashion bloggers in their own country with a lot of followers. At that time, they had never really thought about why a lot of so-called “Fast Fashion” garments sold through the big chains are so cheap.


When the Norwegian newspaper ”Aftenposten” gave them a chance to visit Cambodia, however, then unknown parts of this global industry opened up to them: They worked for a day in a sweatshop, they stayed at workers homes, and they became friends with some of the workers.


Afterwards, in 2014, the Aftenposten web channel produced 5 video episodes as a reality show, which was followed up by a “Season 2” in 2016: Anniken and Frida returned to Cambodia (together with 2 other girls Sarah & Lisa from Sweden) and tried to visit the factories, which produces the garments they buy in Scandinavia. Here they met the same girls as first time. Furthermore, they experience the fight for better working conditions by members of the garment worker labour unions.

It is a moving journey from focus on style and fashion as bloggers, through eye-opening experiences, resulting in friendship and involvement in collaborative solidarity actions in conjunction with workers in Cambodia and back home as well.


Here are links and overview of all episodes (English subtitles):

If you don’t want to view all of them, then I recommend episode 5 in season 1 & episode 5 in season 2.


“SWEATSHOP” Season 1


Episode 1: How many will die here every year?
“Frida, Ludvig, and Anniken arrive their at new reality in Cambodia. It is hot, humid, dusty and miles away from "Norwegian comfort". (11 minutes, video) Click


Episode 2: Our bathroom is larger than her entire house
“Frida, Ludvig, and Anniken visit Sokty, a factory worker living in Phnom Penh, Cambodia. They go shopping to compare prices.” (14 minutes, video) Click


Episode 3: - I´ll keep going until I faint
“After a night on hard concrete floors Frida, Ludvig, and Anniken wake up to their new jobs at a textile factory in Phnom Penh, and a lunch out of the ordinary.” (12 minutes, video) Click


Episode 4: - The large chains are starving their workers!
“One day’s work at the textile factory has earned Frida, Ludvig, and Anniken a total of $US 9 dollars. Now they have to survive on it.” (14 minutes, video) Click


Episode 5: - What kind of life is this?
“Reality hits like a fist when Frida, Ludvig, and Anniken meet textile workers at a resource center in Phnom Penh.” (12 minutes, video) Click






“SWEATSHOP” Season 2


Episode 1: The Dispair
“The girls pick up where they left us after Season 1 one. They want to see the inside of an H&M factory…… By any means necessary.” (10 minutes, video) Click


Episode 2: The Truth
“Digging into the working conditions of a textile worker in Cambodia, Frida gets very emotional after meeting a girl who is about to have a baby. An unsure future awaits them both.” (11 minutes, video) Click


Episode 3: The Insight
“Things get too real while the girls are transported to work on the back of a truck. Anniken breaks down after a close encounter with high voltage cables.”
”This is the way workers are transported out to factories. Every Year, over 1,000 textile workers die in road accidents in these trucks” (10 minutes, video) Click


Episode 4: The Fight
“The girls learn the tragic realities of home-based production and break an entry trying to get behind factory doors.”
”Home-based production” is the term used for all unregulated textile production. The machines can be in peoples homes or on hired premises. The workers have no rights and they are paid only by the units they produce. (12 minutes, video) Click


Episode 5: The Promise
“The girls team up with workers to plan a demonstration and learn the potentially deadly consequences of joining a union.” (11 minutes, video) Click




Final Words

The strength of these videos is the authenticity of all the persons we meet. This goes for the Norwegians as wells all the Cambodians.
But many questions about how the garment industry and how the big supply chains functions are not answered. If you want to go deeper then the film “At all cost” is recommended 
(To be found at Netflix, iTunes, Amazon and at www.truecostmovie.com)

Here is a quote from the website: “ … It’s about the clothes we wear, the people who make them, and the impact the industry is having on our world. The price of clothing has been decreasing for decades, while the human and environmental costs have grown dramatically. “The True Cost” is a groundbreaking documentary film that pulls back the curtain on the untold story and asks us to consider, who really pays the price for our clothing?”
Some alternative ways of production are also documented.

The final words in the film are these:

“Without human capital, without cheap labor, cheap female labor, it (the international textile industry) would not be generating the profit it is. This needs to be acknowledged, it needs to be dealt with, and the garment workers need to be rewarded instead of exploited. Where is their piece of the pie? That is what we have to ask ourselves.” …
”Will we continue a blind eye to the lives of those who are behind our clothes? Or will there be a turning point, a new chapter in our story when together we begin to make a real change as we remember, that everything we wear is touched by human hands. In the midst of all the challenges facing us today, for all the problems that feels bigger than us and beyond our control, maybe we can start here: With clothing!”

………………………………………

You may also go deeper by reading the blog article “Why are our clothes so inexpensive?”
Here is an overview of the content: of the blog post:
 Curated learning materials that focus on…
- Who/What makes our clothes so inexpensive?
- The definition of “sweatshop”    
- The 1911 sweatshop fire in New York
- The 2012 sweatshop fire in Dhaka, Bangladesh
- Saying no to buying clothes from sweatshops?
- Focus on the CSR (Corporate Social Responsibility) is another way forward
- The “Save the Children” example of CSR cooperation: “Work2Learn” in Bangladesh
- Do the producers of your clothes practice “Corporate Social Responsibility”?

 The Un Sustainable Development Goal no. 8 (out of 17) focus on “Promote sustained, inclusive and sustainable economic growth, full and productive employment and decent work for all.”
Deepening:
Goal no. 8: Ecomic Growth and Decent Work for all

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No. 8: “… the goal is to achieve full and productive employment, and decent work, for all women and men by 2030.”