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Journal Article

Citation

Lindholm H, Egels-Zandén N, Rudén C. Int. J. Occup. Environ. Health 2016; 22(4): 283-291.

Affiliation

Department of Environmental Science and Analytical Chemistry (ACES) , Stockholm University , Stockholm , Sweden.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2016, Maney Pub.)

DOI

10.1080/10773525.2016.1227036

PMID

27611103

Abstract

BACKGROUND: In managing chemical risks to the environment and human health in supply chains, voluntary corporate social responsibility (CSR) measures, such as auditing code of conduct compliance, play an important role.

OBJECTIVES: To examine how well suppliers' chemical health and safety performance complies with buyers' CSR policies and whether audited factories improve their performance.

METHODS: CSR audits (n = 288) of garment factories conducted by Fair Wear Foundation (FWF), an independent non-profit organization, were analyzed using descriptive statistics and statistical modeling.

RESULTS: Forty-three per cent of factories did not comply with the FWF code of conduct, i.e. received remarks on chemical safety. Only among factories audited 10 or more times was there a significant increase in the number of factories receiving no remarks.

CONCLUSIONS: Compliance with chemical safety requirements in garment supply chains is low and auditing is statistically correlated with improvements only at factories that have undergone numerous audits.


Language: en

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