OECD Forum 2024 Side Session – The Road to Remedy: From Investigation to Remediation in Apparel Supply Chains
At the 2024 Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) Forum, Transparentem hosted a side session, “The Road to Remedy: From Investigation to Remediation in Apparel Supply Chains,” featuring a panel interview with Transparentem staff and Reaz Chuttoo, President of the Confederation of Private Sector Workers (CTSP). In the session, Transparentem hosts a conversation on […]
Debt, wage theft and coercion drive the global garment industry – the only answer is collective action
Major fashion brands including Barbour and PVH (the owner of Calvin Klein and Tommy Hilfiger) have agreed to pay over £400,000 in compensation to migrant workers in Mauritius. These workers from Bangladesh, India, China and Madagascar had been forced to pay illegal recruitment fees and, alongside other indicators of forced labour, were allegedly subject to […]
Fashion Brands to Compensate Garment Workers in Mauritius for Forced Labor
Fashion Brands to Compensate Garment Workers in Mauritius: Leading fashion brands, including Barbour and PVH, have committed to paying £400,000 to garment workers in Mauritius. Transparentem, a US-based organization, found signs of forced labor and illegal recruitment fees for jobs in five factories in Mauritius. PVH and Barbour have pledged to reimburse workers at REAL […]
Brands agree to pay migrant garment workers
MAURITIUS – Leading brands including PVH, which owns Calvin Klein and Tommy Hilfiger, have agreed to pay more than $400,000 to garment workers in Mauritius after an investigation found migrants had paid illegal recruitment fees for their jobs. It follows a report from the US-based Transparentem nonprofit which interviewed 83 workers during a two-year modern […]
Mauritius: Transparentem investigation prompts buyer remediation & compensation for migrant workers at garment factories supplying major apparel brands
After a two year investigation into conditions for workers at five factories in Mauritius, Transparentem has published its findings and results of its engagement with apparel brands, prompting remediation and compensation for migrant workers who suffered a litany of labour rights abuses. Almost 100 garment workers from Bangladesh were interviewed in total for the investigation. […]
3 fashion companies agree to compensate Mauritius garment workers following report
Three major fashion companies, including PVH, the parent company of Tommy Hilfiger and Calvin Klein, Second Clothing, and UK-heritage brand Barbour, have agreed to pay a total of 420,593 USD in compensation to garment workers in Mauritius following the publication of an undercover investigation into labor rights abuse.
Fashion firms agree to compensate garment workers in Mauritius
Barbour and owner of Calvin Klein and Hilfiger among brands to pay £400,000 after report alleges illegal hiring fees, deception and intimidation.
Ben Skinner Discusses Transparentem’s Mauritius Investigation on MSNBC
Our Founder & President Benjamin Skinner recently sat down with Richard Lui on MSNBC to discuss our newly published investigation into labor rights abuses in apparel factories in Mauritius.
Transparentem Founder Ben Skinner’s NYT Op-ed on Apparel Supply Chains 10 Years After Rana Plaza
In this New York Times op-ed, Transparentem founder and president Ben Skinner exposes the abuses still rife in apparel supply chains ten years after the Rana Plaza disaster. One big reason: brands’ overreliance on the multibillion-dollar social auditing industry, which often fails to detect problems when factory managers deceive auditors.
Uncovering Audit Deception: Countering Hidden Social Compliance Violations
“Sophie Broach, an investigations analyst at the global workers’ rights advocate Transparentem, writes about the nonprofit organization’s investigations into forced labor, child labor and other human rights abuses in economies in Asia, including India, Malaysia and Myanmar, which revealed the seriousness and prevalence of audit deception.”