Vai al contenuto principale della pagina

Challenging the Chip [[electronic resource] ] : Labor Rights and Environmental Justice in the Global Electronics Industry



(Visualizza in formato marc)    (Visualizza in BIBFRAME)

Autore: Pellow David Visualizza persona
Titolo: Challenging the Chip [[electronic resource] ] : Labor Rights and Environmental Justice in the Global Electronics Industry Visualizza cluster
Pubblicazione: Philadelphia, : Temple University Press, 2008
Descrizione fisica: 1 online resource (372 p.)
Disciplina: 306.36
331.7/621381
331.7621381
Soggetto topico: Electronic industries
Employee rights
Environmental justice
Globalization
Internationality
Health
Personnel Management
Toxic Actions
Physics
Human Rights
Population Characteristics
Organization and Administration
Social Control, Formal
Chemical Actions and Uses
Natural Science Disciplines
Social Sciences
Sociology
Health Services Administration
Health Care
Health Care Economics and Organizations
Occupations
Civil Rights
Electronics
Employee Grievances
Environmental Pollutants
International Cooperation
Occupational Health
Business & Economics
Industries
Altri autori: SonnenfeldDavid Allan  
SmithTed  
Note generali: Description based upon print version of record.
Nota di contenuto: Contents; Foreword: Technology Happens; Acknowledgments; 1 The Quest for Sustainability and Justice in a High-Tech World; I. GLOBAL ELECTRONICS; 2 The Changing Map of Global Electronics: Networks of Mass Production in the New Economy; 3 Occupational Health in the Semiconductor Industry; 4 Double Jeopardy: Gender and Migration in Electronics Manufacturing; 5 "Made in China": Electronics Workers in the World's FastestGrowing Economy; 6 Corporate Social Responsibility in Thailand's Electronics Industry; 7 Electronics Workers in India
8 Out of the Shadows and into the Gloom? Worker and Community Health in and around Centraland Eastern Europe's Semiconductor PlantsII. ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE AND LABOR RIGHTS; 9 From Grassroots to Global: The Silicon Valley Toxics Coalition's Milestones inBuilding a Movement for Corporate Accountabilityand Sustainability in the High-Tech Industry; 10 The Struggle for Occupational Health in Silicon Valley: A Conversation with Amanda Hawes; 11 Immigrant Workers in Two Eras: Struggles and Successes in Silicon Valley
12 Worker Health at National Semiconductor, Greenock (Scotland): Freedom to Kill?13 Community-Based Organizing for Labor Rights, Health, and the Environment: Television Manufacturing on the Mexico-U.S. Border; 14 Labor Rights and Occupational Health in Jalisco's Electronics Industry (Mexico); 15 Breaking the Silicon Silence: Voicing Health and Environmental Impacts withinTaiwan's Hsinchu Science Park; 16 Human Lives Valued Less Than Dirt: Former RCA Workers Contaminated by PollutionFighting Worldwide for Justice (Taiwan); 17 Unionizing Electronics: The Need for New Strategies
III. ELECTRONIC WASTE AND EXTENDED PRODUCER RESPONSIBILITY18 The Electronics Production Life Cycle: From Toxics to Sustainability: Getting Off theToxic Treadmill; 19 High-Tech Pollution in Japan: Growing Problems, Alternative Solutions; 20 High-Tech's Dirty Little Secret: The Economics and Ethics of theElectronic Waste Trade; 21 Hi-Tech Heaps, Forsaken Lives: E-Waste in Delhi; 22 Importing Extended Producer Responsibility for Electronic Equipment into the United States; 23 International Environmental Agreements and the Information Technology Industry
24 Design Change in Electrical and Electronic Equipment: Impacts of Extended ProducerResponsibility Legislation in Swedenand Japan25 ToxicDude.com: The Dell Campaign; Appendix A: Principles of Environmental Justice; Appendix B: The Silicon Principles of Socially and EnvironmentallyResponsible Electronics Manufacturing; Appendix C: Sample Shareholder Resolutions; Appendix D: Computer TakeBack Campaign Statement of Principles; Appendix E: Electronics Recycler's Pledge of True Stewardship; Acronyms Used; References; Resources; Contributors; Index
Sommario/riassunto: From Silicon Valley in California to Silicon Glen in Scotland, from Silicon Island in Taiwan to Silicon Paddy in China, the social, economic, and ecological effects of the international electronics industry are widespread. The production of electronic and computer components contaminates air, land, and water around the globe. As this eye-opening book reveals, the people who suffer the consequences are largely poor, female, immigrant, and minority. Challenging the Chip is the first comprehensive examination of the impacts of electronics manufacturing on workers and local environment
Titolo autorizzato: Challenging the Chip  Visualizza cluster
ISBN: 1-281-09390-4
9786611093907
1-59213-331-2
Formato: Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione: Inglese
Record Nr.: 9910819048503321
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui