Sweatshops are factories in which workers have to work for long hours‚they don’t get paid a lot of money‚ and unsafe working conditions. They are usually located in Central America‚ South America‚ Asia‚ China‚ India and some parts of Europe. Sweatshops are created because it is an easy way for companies to get profit by downsizing how much the cost of production was. In order for companies to lower costs‚ they look for places with low wages. People should boycott sweatshops. They get paid horribly
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suppliers to pay more than the local industry standard when it is insufficient to live on? Should they pay wages in the Third World that are equivalent to US wages? Should they provide the same level of medical benefits that are provided in the US? The same levels of work place safety? The international standards as set by the United Nations state: “Wages and benefits paid for a standard working week should meet at least legal or industry minimum wage standards and always be sufficient to meet the basic
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Sweatshops 1 Sweatshops and the Children that work in them Lisa Marsh Strayer University Business Ethics 290 Professor Tacha Brooks Sweatshops 2 Abstract There are so many children that are being forced and used to work in such poor conditions. I feel this is ethically wrong to basically use children in this fashion in order to mass produce a product. It exploit children in one of the worse kind of ways almost like imprisoning
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when in competition. I did it all I played football‚ baseball‚ and basketball. Basketball was my least favorite I didn’t like the game or how it was so soft‚ I’m an competitive person and you couldn’t show your emotions how you wanted so I withdrawn from that after middle school. I continued to play football and baseball throughout high school until I decided I was no longer going to play and focus on football because I know that it will get me the farthest in life. By doing that I have earned an
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“Garment Sweatshops in El Salvador” A great number of large companies located in the United States and parts Europe hire subcontractors in third world countries‚ like El Salvador to manufacture their apparel‚ which go for sale at very high prices. Most of these factories where the labor is being done are located in so called free-trade zones. The renters of these factories do not have to pay taxes except for the export tariffs‚ which are quite low because of the product that is being exported
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6/27/10 English 101 cal Dr. O’Connor The effects that sweatshops have on the economy In recent discussions of economics‚ a controversial issue has been whether sweatshops should be shut down in foreign countries. On one hand‚ some argue that sweat shop labor should cease to exist in foreign countries because of the poor conditions in which these employees work
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From Chinese English‚ Chinglish to Standard English The modern English trends to globalization and also manifests localization. Chinese English and Chinglish are two different kinds of linguistic expressions and of Chinese characteristics. Chinese English is a variety of English and Chinglish is a transitional language before English learners know English well. Finally‚ they trend to the same and blend in Standard English. 1. Chinese English It is commonly believed that Chinese English is
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In his story "A Sweatshop Romance‚" Abraham Cahan does a good job of creating a clear visual of the activities that occurred at the coat-making factory of Mr. Leizer Lipman‚ a Jewish-American who got married to a woman from a poor town in Western Russia. In this story‚ there are certain propagandistic situations as well as anxieties and concerns that relates to class-consciousness in the twentieth century. According to the story‚ Mrs. Lipman‚ the proprietor’s wife and a co-owner of the business occupied
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Sweatshops Global economics operate at an extremely expedient pace. Producing goods and services efficiently and quickly is the focus of thousands of corporations. These corporations are constantly competing to gain an advantage that will increase profits. Opportunities for capital investment and expansion are discovered daily. Unfortunately‚ many times these massive corporations can be linked to unjust labor practices occurring in developing countries. Companies such as Nike‚ Microsoft‚ and Apple
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appreciated‚ no one might acknowledge the great contribution of people like Janu Akther‚ a 22-year-old man who works in sweatshops in Bangladesh to produce American collegiate apparel―an indispensable part of the game. An $18 baseball cap can be a joy of many American people to wear but a dirty exploitation device in Akther’s mind. As a sweatshop laborer‚ he works every day from early morning until late night in miserable conditions of heat and dangerous machine. Each hour laboring takes away much
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