"Sweatshops and respect for persons" Essays and Research Papers

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    Respect

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    Mark Anderson 10/9/13 RESPECT Respect plays a role in our everyday lives. When we go to school‚ there’s respect. When we go to a restaurant‚ there is respect. When you go to a family reunion‚ there is respect. You may not notice it‚ but that’s only because they are being respectful to you. If you are not respectful then you will be disrespected because you’re being rude to. So you should always be respectful to others so they will treat you

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    the workroom‚ try to touch and hug them and threaten to fire them if they refuse. We were told of the dehumanizing verbal and physical abuse; managers scream at workers…” (Feminists Against Sweatshops). Additionally‚ there are many cases of factory fires killing hundreds of workers due to locked doors. Sweatshops often violate two or more Universal Declaration of Human Rights‚ such as‚ the right to life and living in freedom and safety (3)‚ no slavery (4)‚ no torture‚ cruel‚ or degrading treatment

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    Sweatshops Research Paper

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    make a profit. Sweatshops are factories where people who live in developing countries work. Sweatshops are famous for overworking and abusing their employees‚ having small‚ cramped work spaces where there is little to no ventilation. American companies use sweatshops to get their products quickly manufactured and selling for the cheapest price possible. American Companies should not be allowed to use sweatshops and American consumers should stop buying products made by sweatshops in order to keep

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    opportunity to buy as much as they can for as little as possible especially on black Friday. The problem he identifies in his article‚ is the high human cost and forced people in sweatshops have to work per week for just pennies an hour just to make the necessary for their survival. Ravisankar assumes his readers know little about sweatshops and furthermore‚ how difficult and awful conditions are really are. He goes on to say that some of these workers have to be forced to work extremely long 70 to 80 hours

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    By definition a sweatshop is a “negatively connoted term for any working environment considered to be unacceptably difficult or dangerous. Sweatshop workers often work long hours for very low pay in horrible conditions‚ regardless of laws mandating overtime pay and or minimum wage”. Many corporations in the United States use sweatshop labor in countries over seas such as China to produce their products at a lower cost. As entailed in the letter from a man born in China‚ many citizens on these countries

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    Sweatshops Research Papers

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    that seem to go on forever. Imagine young women who have aged too fast sitting behind these machines working their life away. These women are slaving away making the clothes many United States companies are selling today. Yes‚ the U.S. has made sweatshops illegal within its borders‚ but its companies are still greatly involved with them. Many companies have just outsourced their productions to foreign countries due to the outlaw

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    The argument for those that support the idea of sweatshops is that they provide some form of standard in living in an otherwise developing/poor company. Because these factories are mostly in poverty rich countries where it is hard to find any form of income‚ these job at least provide some source of income that would otherwise not be available. These arguments could be supported that the jobs help boost the developing countries. Sweatshops do not follow the standards and ethics of the parent company

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    Part 1-Intellectual Standards 1. “According to Cromwell’s director of auxiliary services more that 90% of the logo merchandise is produced by Transterra Textiles…” -This example violates the Universal standards of Relevance and Significance. Why is the director of auxiliary services considered credible when speaking on the production of the school’s merchandise? Why is their opinion relevant? What significance does this fact have in the ultimate goal of changing the factory? To correct the problem

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    Pertaining to the issue on Sweatshops overall‚ it always existed in the past and many employees‚ including women were taken advantage by employers under this concept. Throughout the course of time‚ many companies began to take their businesses to places other than the United States for that the price they will pay for production of goods would be a fraction of what they would pay if their business was in this country. In regards to the concept on Sweatshops overseas‚ it is certain that businesses

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    Sweatshops and Child labor

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    Sweatshops and Child Labor In this book‚ Where Am I Wearing‚ Kelsey Timmerman travels around the world in search of the factories and people making his clothes. Through this book Timmerman sheds light on the realities of sweatshops and child labor in developing countries. What Timmerman is trying to say and trying to get us to feel is that sweatshops aren’t necessarily a bad thing in some instances they’re the best means of survival for some families. Families in these countries would be out

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