
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


In this episode of ESG Insider, S&P Global Market Intelligence reporter Gautam Naik takes listeners inside the campaign to end forced labor in Uzbekistan's cotton fields. He visited Uzbek cotton fields during the 2019 harvest, sat down with human rights activists and interviewed government ministers trying to change the system.
A decade ago, Uzbekistan forced more than one million doctors, teachers, nurses and even schoolchildren to head out into the fields each autumn and bring in the cotton crop. Back then, a good chunk of Uzbek cotton – produced under harsh conditions of forced labor -- ended up in thousands of shirts, jeans and shoes sold by western fashion brands. But as more and more companies stopped using Uzbek cotton, something unexpected happened: the government backed down and decided to aggressively roll back its state-sponsored forced-labor regime.
For investors and asset managers who worry about the risks of labor exploitation in consumer supply chains, the Uzbekistan cotton story is a rare thing -- a vivid example of how corporate pressure can lead to enduring change in the global fight against forced labor.
Listen to the episode to learn more, and read the story on spglobal.com: https://bit.ly/2sCX1Wq
Subscribe to ESG Insider to catch future episodes.
(Photo: AP)
By S&P Global4.4
5757 ratings
In this episode of ESG Insider, S&P Global Market Intelligence reporter Gautam Naik takes listeners inside the campaign to end forced labor in Uzbekistan's cotton fields. He visited Uzbek cotton fields during the 2019 harvest, sat down with human rights activists and interviewed government ministers trying to change the system.
A decade ago, Uzbekistan forced more than one million doctors, teachers, nurses and even schoolchildren to head out into the fields each autumn and bring in the cotton crop. Back then, a good chunk of Uzbek cotton – produced under harsh conditions of forced labor -- ended up in thousands of shirts, jeans and shoes sold by western fashion brands. But as more and more companies stopped using Uzbek cotton, something unexpected happened: the government backed down and decided to aggressively roll back its state-sponsored forced-labor regime.
For investors and asset managers who worry about the risks of labor exploitation in consumer supply chains, the Uzbekistan cotton story is a rare thing -- a vivid example of how corporate pressure can lead to enduring change in the global fight against forced labor.
Listen to the episode to learn more, and read the story on spglobal.com: https://bit.ly/2sCX1Wq
Subscribe to ESG Insider to catch future episodes.
(Photo: AP)

1,248 Listeners

399 Listeners

6 Listeners

498 Listeners

40 Listeners

9 Listeners

6 Listeners

135 Listeners

647 Listeners

128 Listeners

27 Listeners

28 Listeners

9 Listeners

465 Listeners

4 Listeners

98 Listeners

143 Listeners

29 Listeners

11 Listeners

4 Listeners

77 Listeners

176 Listeners

28 Listeners

628 Listeners

1 Listeners

266 Listeners

229 Listeners

6 Listeners

3 Listeners

0 Listeners

6 Listeners

5 Listeners

5 Listeners

27 Listeners