1 / 13

Hitting the Wall

Hitting the Wall. Nike & International Labor Practices. CSR…and Nike?. Keady vs. Nike and St. John's University http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vaK0-q97m18 http://www.teamsweat.org/2011/10/20/video-are-nikes-factory-workers-paid-a-living-wage/ NIKE

barryl
Download Presentation

Hitting the Wall

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Hitting the Wall Nike & International Labor Practices

  2. CSR…and Nike? • Keady vs. Nike and St. John's University http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vaK0-q97m18 http://www.teamsweat.org/2011/10/20/video-are-nikes-factory-workers-paid-a-living-wage/ • NIKE • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iXsaYR1Izqw • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jPjE42aCico&NR=1 • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rwCfPVz_ddY&NR=1 • http://www.teamsweat.org/

  3. Debate the Case from one Role • Does Ballinger have a convincing argument? • Does Nike have a convincing response? • How well has Nike handled the publicity surrounding its labor practices? • Could/should Nike have done anything differently? • What is a “fair” wage in Vietnam? How should Nike think about it? • What role do consumers play? Do we have any power? Have we used it to shape unfair practices globally?

  4. Debate • Count off by 3 and join your group • Get organized • ID Key points from your role Nike (Phil Knight, CEO and corporation) General Public (consumer, shareholder, stakeholder, constituents) Jeff Ballinger (NGO critics) • Each team shares (10 mins each) • Opportunity for rebuttal (5 mins each, 2-3 rounds) • Closing arguments (5 mins each)

  5. Segue to Class Lecture • Review key issues in the case • Post hoc analyses • CSR reporting • Value chain ethics • Links to OB • Final thoughts

  6. What’s “fair” labor wage? • How much? • Location? • Age? • Benefits? • Rights? • Responsibility for conditions?

  7. Nike Sees theLight… • Gave $7.7M to Intl Youth Foundation to establish the Global Alliance for Workers and Communities (w/Gap, World Bank, and Penn State) to monitor sub-contractor practices. • Quadrupled employees working on labor practices • Issued corporate social responsibility report

  8. Social Responsibility Report “By June 2000 Apparel/Footwear had taken full responsibility for the product creation process, and our material supply chain related issues.” *Nike Corporate Responsibility Report, FY 2001, p. 6.

  9. Examples: Value Chain Ethics • Ford and Firestone • Apple suppliers and bribery • Starbuck’s and Fair Trade coffee • Hershey’s and slave cocoa • China and _________ • Wal-Mart, Albertsons, Ralphs, Vons etc. • McDonald’s (suppliers and customers) • Tobacco, Casinos, Guns, Fast Food, Glue, Computers, Tracking Chips, Ephedrine, Private Security…

  10. Steps Forward orBack? • Apple Follows Suit • FoxConn suicides • http://abcnews.go.com/watch/nightline/SH5584743/VD55173552/nightline-221-apples-chinese-factories-exclusive • U.S. relies heavily on goods produced in – and often at the expense of – people in the developing world. • We lost 28% of our high-tech manufacturing jobs in the past decade to overseas labor. • Seems we’ve OK w/this, because we’re unwilling to effect change with our wallets. Nike sales increasing and Apple is now the most valuable company in history. • Honduran Factory • Shut down w/o paying workers • Nike “has not done enough to help” • University actions • Cornell protests, U WI cuts ties, NYU reviews Nike contract, U WA pressure • Excessive O/T in China • Openly burning scraps • Sales up in China • Currency/export issues

  11. Value Chain ResponsibilityConnection, Control, Knowledge • Connection • Where, when, how, why • Control • Ought implies Can • Parker Principle: “With great power comes great responsibility” • Voice or Exit • Knowledge • Plausible Deniability • Obligation of Active Monitoring

  12. Remember OB? We can explain behaviorUnethical decisions are NOT INEVITABLE • Fairness & Equity • Collective Action Problems • Goal Displacement • Escalation • Separation Fallacy • Self-regulation • Emotional Intelligence • Groupthink • Cultural Relativism • Self-biasing • Diffusion of Responsibility • Plausible Deniability • External Locus of Control • In-group favoritism • Psychological Egoism • Fundamental Attribution Error • Value Chain Responsibility Labor Rights, Human rights, Natural Environment

  13. What you’ll say to yourself just prior to a questionable ethics decision… • The ends justify the means • I have a right to… • Someone else will do it • It’s how things are done in this [company, industry, country] • Just this once • They should have known • It’s not lying it’s [bluffing, puffery, marketing, selling, etc.] • Everyone’s doing it • I deserve this because… I’ve earned it… • I’m just doing my job • I don’t discriminate against anyone • I’m just doing what I was told • It’s someone else’s responsibility [parents, law, government…] • Not as bad as… • That’s a business decision, not an ethics decision

More Related