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Past Events

Screening

Interventions in the Supply Chain

20 Jun 2018, 6:30 pm - 7:30 pm

Institute for Contemporary Art, London, UK

Exploitation of workers across supply chains in the UK and abroad is a growing threat to human rights. With the exposure of labour abuses in the garment industry in Leicester to global corporations headquartered in London implicated in using child labour in Turkey or Indonesia, the pursuit of corporate accountability is critical for the effective protection of human rights. However, with many states retreating from their obligations and creating obstacles to workers organising and barriers to accessing justice, what options are there?

Collaborating for the first time, the Human Rights Lawyers Association (HRLA) and Institute of Contemporary Arts bring together Shanta Martin from Leigh Day, Christina Varvia from Forensic Architecture, Jenny Holdcroft from IndustriALL Global Union and Dr Anil Yilmaz-Vastardis from University of Essex School of Law and the Human Rights Centre to discuss active strategies in their work.

Chaired by Krishnendu Mukherjee from Doughty Street Chambers, who has worked on the environmental damage caused by business operations in India, this discussion will explore the opportunities for effective legal interventions into labour conditions. The panel interrogates new methods of promoting accountability, from strategic litigation to negotiating private agreements and from advising companies around best practice to developing forensic methods of investigation.

Forensic Architecture will screen part of their video report analysing a factory fire in Pakistan in 2012, in which the alleged failure to fulfil safety measures contributed to the death of 260 workers. This investigation grounds the discussion in an understanding of the obstacles and opportunities encountered in securing accountability. The findings have been submitted to the Regional Court in Dortmund, Germany, where legal action against the company who sourced clothing from the factory is ongoing.

Visit the ICA website for more information.

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Screening

Interventions in the Supply Chain

20 Jun 2018, 6:30 pm - 7:30 pm

Institute for Contemporary Art, London, UK

Exploitation of workers across supply chains in the UK and abroad is a growing threat to human rights. With the exposure of labour abuses in the garment industry in Leicester to global corporations headquartered in London implicated in using child labour in Turkey or Indonesia, the pursuit of corporate accountability is critical for the effective protection of human rights. However, with many states retreating from their obligations and creating obstacles to workers organising and barriers to accessing justice, what options are there?

Collaborating for the first time, the Human Rights Lawyers Association (HRLA) and Institute of Contemporary Arts bring together Shanta Martin from Leigh Day, Christina Varvia from Forensic Architecture, Jenny Holdcroft from IndustriALL Global Union and Dr Anil Yilmaz-Vastardis from University of Essex School of Law and the Human Rights Centre to discuss active strategies in their work.

Chaired by Krishnendu Mukherjee from Doughty Street Chambers, who has worked on the environmental damage caused by business operations in India, this discussion will explore the opportunities for effective legal interventions into labour conditions. The panel interrogates new methods of promoting accountability, from strategic litigation to negotiating private agreements and from advising companies around best practice to developing forensic methods of investigation.

Forensic Architecture will screen part of their video report analysing a factory fire in Pakistan in 2012, in which the alleged failure to fulfil safety measures contributed to the death of 260 workers. This investigation grounds the discussion in an understanding of the obstacles and opportunities encountered in securing accountability. The findings have been submitted to the Regional Court in Dortmund, Germany, where legal action against the company who sourced clothing from the factory is ongoing.

Visit the ICA website for more information.