Wednesday, April 15, 2020
Walt Disney Essays - Business, Economy, Anti-corporate Activism
  Walt Disney  Consumers can play an important role in closing sweatshops, and they have a  right to know what companies are using sweatshops to produce their product there  are simple steps consumers can take to help fight against the use of sweatshops.    Right now many famous companies are using sweatshops readily to save money.    However, ironically, the companies that use them are the companies that can  afford to spend the extra money for regular labor. Some of these name brand  companies include; Nike, Disney, Kathie- Lee Gifford, Gap, Liz Claiborne, Ralph    Lauren, and Wal-Mart. Many people have no idea that these companies are using  sweatshops. Disney for example is a very well known company. No one would ever  expect that their favorite childhood Disney memory could have been created  through sweatshops and child labor. Disney is just one of the many well  respected, loved companies with dark secrets. It is hard to believe as a  consumer that a company that consumers have grown to trust and love uses such  forced labor, with underaged sweatshop employees making consumers favorite  characters come to life. Well, Peter and Rochelle Schweizer makes it clear that  it could be a possibility: " The face of Disney the manufacturer is not a  pretty one. All too often Disney clothes, toys, and trinkets are made by child  laborers. Disney licensees have been caught using child labor on three  continents" (245). Many other companies are practicing the same type of labor  policies without consumers's knowledge. If companies feel that sweatshops are  a decent and fair way of doing business and have no problems with continuing to  use them, they should at least make these reasons public and confront their  consumers's concerns. They should let their consumers know why they choose to  conduct their business in this manner. Consumers would then have the real  information on the product that they choose, and not only what the company wants  them to Mueckler 2 know. Consumers would then be able to base their product  choice on work place conditions as well as the over all product information.    Some companies's use of sweatshops have been made public. Kathie-Lee    Gifford's designer clothes company for example was widely evident in the news  in 1996. Gifford was shocked when she heard of the sweatshop conditions her  company was using. Since this Gifford has been involved in organizing the    Apparel Industry Partnership with the U.S. Department of Labor. This  organization tries to crack down on the use of child labor. This is one example  of where the public influenced a company to change its policies. This gives hope  that with consumer support other companies can be influenced in similar ways.    Disney, however, has not been so noteworthy in their efforts. Disney licensees  go out of their way to bring their company to countries such as Burma, where the  practice of child labor is a normal everyday event, and they exploit this to  create their product as cheaply as possible. Schweizer explains how remote the  locations that Disney licensees use, " For years Disney licensees were  manufacturing in a country few Americans could locate on a map. Burma- also  known as Myanmar, the name given it by the ruling military junta- is a poverty -  stricken nation wedged between India, China, and the lush mountains of    Thailand." (251). This is an ideal location because so few people are aware of  it. This makes it easy for the Disney licensees to continue their business  without being detected. Another insight to Burma is that drug lords hold great  power and are protected by the government. Disney licensees had to get the  permission to have sweatshops in Burma from these drug lords. This shows how the  drug lords are the ones with the power in Burma. First companies must win the  respect of these drug lords before they are able to work there. " Burma's  attraction as a manufacturing site is obvious: ultracheap labor." (252).    Mueckler 3 When consumers and human rights groups along with labor organizations  took action in 1996, they did get a response from Disney. The National Labor    Committee and other organizations together made Disney's involvement in Burma  public with the Free Burma Campaign. Disney denied these claims. They pretended  they had no involvement in Burma. They knew how the negative public announcement  would hurt the company, which is the major reason why companies hide the facts  from the consumers. Schweizer explains that many other respectable companies  have volunteered to monitor their working conditions, however, Disney is not one  of them. This shows that Disney is aware that    
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