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“Our work to help bring new legal protection for some 600,000 workers in the UK food industry demonstrates the magnitude of our impact.”
— ETI Annual Review 2005/2006

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REPORTS ON THE ETI IMPACT ASSESSMENT 2006
The ETI code of labour practice: Do workers really benefit?

1

Main findings and recommendations from an independent assessment for the Ethical Trading Initiative

Cover imageAbout this report

This report presents the main findings and recommendations from the second phase of the ETI Impact Assessment, during which the research team looked in detail at the impact of the ETI Base Code in selected supplier sites in five countries (India, Vietnam, UK, South Africa and Costa Rica) and three sub-sectors (garments, footwear and horticulture). It contains four chapters:

Chapter 1 outlines the aims and objectives of the impact assessment and provides a brief overview of how the study was conducted.

Chapter 2 presents the main areas of impact resulting from implementation of the ETI Base Code. It covers:

Chapter 3 outlines the key factors that were found to affect impact. These include:

Chapter 4 presents IDS's recommendations on how the impact of code implementation can be improved. It includes 15 general recommendations, each of which is broken down into specific recommendations for ETI, brands and retailers, suppliers, trade unions, NGOs, auditors and government.

An appendix summarises the key findings from the first phase of the study, which examined how and where ETI members were implementing codes of labour practice.

 

Detailed contents

 

Downloads

Download PDFDownload PART 1 (main findings and recommendations) in PDF format [PDF, 1.0Mb]

Clickable list of all reports in this series.

 


This series of reports has been prepared by the Institute of Development Studies (IDS) and the views expressed do not necesarily represent the views of ETI or of its member organisations. IDS is responsible for the accuracy of information contained in the document and its recommendations have not necessarily been endorsed by ETI.

© Institute of Development Studies, University of Sussex, 2006


See also:

A preliminary response by the Ethical Trading Initiative to IDS’ study (19 October 2006)

ETI Activities: Research projects: Impact assessment.

ETI Events: Conferences: Biennial conference 2005: Workshop - Assessing our impact

ETI Resources: Other resources: Impact assessment

 

Reports on the ETI impact assessment:
intro/downloads | about each report