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Re-licensing Lands' End
Duke has renewed its trademark license contract
with Lands' End, following the resolution of complaints about labor
practices at an apparel factory in El Salvador that produces clothing
bearing Duke trademarks.
In March, Jim Wilkerson, the university's director of trademark
licensing and stores operations, notified the Dodgeville, Wisconsin,
clothier of the university's decision to suspend its contract,
based on information from both the Worker Rights Consortium (WRC)
and Fair Labor Association (FLA). The two organizations, to which
Duke and more than 100 colleges and universities now belong, had
concluded that Primo, a Lands' End supplier in El Salvador, was "blacklisting" workers
who had actual or perceived ties to unions. The organizations had
tried unsuccessfully during the past year to resolve the issues
with Lands' End.
"Lands' End needed to secure changes in Primo's hiring process
in order to safeguard against future discrimination of any kind,
including anti-union discrimination," Wilkerson says. "It
also needed to remediate the harm that was done to workers who
were inappropriately denied employment at the Primo factory.
"The WRC and the FLA recommended that Lands' End provide assistance
to the Just Garments factory, where a number of these workers have
employment or will have employment. Lands' End has agreed to these
stipulations and more."
According to the WRC, Just Garments has offered employment to the
blacklisted workers and is the first factory in the history of
the export apparel industry in El Salvador to sign an accord with
a union. The accord is a prelude to a collective-bargaining agreement
that the factory has pledged to negotiate as soon as production
is under way.
In 1997, Duke became the first university in the country to adopt
a code of conduct that required licensees to agree to independent
monitoring of factory working conditions, including remediation
of violations in a prompt and effective manner. The university's
Code of Conduct for manufacturers includes the requirement that
the right of freedom of association and collective bargaining be
upheld, and that no discriminatory or retaliatory actions are taken
against workers who express an interest in or choose to exercise
this right.
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