2012
DOI: 10.1111/j.1751-9020.2012.00473.x
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A Review of Private Regulation: Codes and Monitoring in the Apparel Industry

Abstract: This article reviews the last decade of scholarship on a leading corporate social responsibility initiative: the use of codes of conduct and monitoring in the global garment industry. The review focuses on three debates in the field: the evaluation of code and monitoring effectiveness, the problematic of various relationships in transnational anti-sweatshop campaigns, and the meaning of private regulation vis-a-vis state enforcement. The article concludes that codes and monitoring do not constitute a solution … Show more

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Cited by 37 publications
(26 citation statements)
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References 30 publications
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“…This not only runs counter to empirical evidence that the generalized direction of change 'on the ground' has not been towards greater compliance (Newell 2005;Lund-Thomsen 2008;Esbenshade 2012), but also tends to obscure from view the structural and systemic roots of labour exploitation and forced labour.…”
Section: The Contours Of Governance Debates On Forced Labourcontrasting
confidence: 40%
“…This not only runs counter to empirical evidence that the generalized direction of change 'on the ground' has not been towards greater compliance (Newell 2005;Lund-Thomsen 2008;Esbenshade 2012), but also tends to obscure from view the structural and systemic roots of labour exploitation and forced labour.…”
Section: The Contours Of Governance Debates On Forced Labourcontrasting
confidence: 40%
“…Particularly in relation to labour and environmental standards, the dominant governance agents are now assumed to be private corporate actors putting in place a mode of 'transnational private regulation' (Bartley 2007), whose relationship with public governance remains the subject of debate. Such outcomes have been lamented by many, arguing that private governance cannot be considered an effective or legitimate substitute for public governance, and that public and private governance can be, increasingly are, and need to be complementary (Mayer and Gereffi 2010, Vogel 2010, Esbenshade 2012, Locke 2013. The assumption nevertheless often remains that private governance is in the ascendant (and has been for some time), and that public authority is increasingly compressed by private governance.…”
Section: The Myth Of the Powerless Statementioning
confidence: 99%
“…It has been well documented that the functions of regulatory governance have been assumed increasingly by private actors, especially in relation to labour and environmental standards (Mayer and Gereffi 2010, Vogel 2010, Büthe and Mattli 2011, Esbenshade 2012, Haufler 2013, Locke 2013, Auld 2014, LeBaron and Lister 2015. Private actors are increasingly cast as regulators, important development actors and agents of global justice.…”
Section: States and Private Authority: Regulatory Governancementioning
confidence: 99%
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“…However, there is a growing body of empirical work that questions the effectiveness of CSR codes of conduct and auditing (Esbenshade 2012). For example, some local producers have become as powerful as MNCs because of their size, prominent position in a GPN, and/or lack of viable alternatives in a GPN.…”
Section: The Promise Of Csr Codes Of Conduct and Codes Of Conductmentioning
confidence: 99%