Sweatshop
From Mises Wiki, the global repository of classical-liberal thought
A sweatshop is a shop or factory in which employees work for long hours at low wages and under unhealthy conditions.[1] Sweatshops are typically located in Third World countries.
References
- ↑ "Sweatshop", Merriam-Webster Dictionary, referenced 2011-06-08.
Links
- Nike Is Right by William Stepp, March 2001
- Sweatshops and Third World Living Standards: Are the Jobs Worth the Sweat? (pdf) by Benjamin Powell and David Skarbek, September 2004
- Establishing Government Accountability in the Anti-Sweatshop Campaign: Toward a Logical, Activist Approach to improving the Working Conditions of the Poor (pdf) by Ellennita Muetze Hellmer
- How "Sweatshops" Help the Poor by Thomas J. DiLorenzo, November 2006
- Bono the Capitalist Exploiter by Thomas J. DiLorenzo and Vedran Vuk, April 2007
- Sweatshops, Choice, and Exploitation by Matt Zwolinski, October 2007
- In Defense of "Sweatshops" by Benjamin Powell, June 2008
- Quick Musings on Sweatshops and Immigration by Art Carden, April 2011
- Sweatshops, Tacos, and Wal-Mart: What are the Critics Criticizing? by Art Carden, June 2011
- Sweatshop Wages and Third World Workers: Are the Wages Worth the Sweat (video) by Ben Powell, June 2011
- Sweatshop Blues: An Interview with Benjamin Powell by The Freeman, January 2014
- Sweatshop at Wikipedia