Invisible Hands: Narratives of Human Rights in the Global Economy

COMING IN 2013 FROM VOICE OF WITNESS

INVISIBLE HANDS: NARRATIVES OF HUMAN RIGHTS IN THE GLOBAL ECONOMY

Edited by Corinne Goria

The majority of products that we buy – cell phones, laptops, toaster ovens, jeans, detergents, sugar, and wine, to name a few – take long journeys through the supply chain and across the globe to arrive in our stores. This new book from Voice of Witness will explore the lives of the men, women, and children who have worked in, or lived in the wake of, the production of these goods– and who have suffered severe and even deadly consequences for their work.

Terri: A US war veteran and single mother who was locked out of her job at a California mine for months after her union refused to accept the mine’s cancellation of pensions, seniority benefits and secure jobs for its members.

Kalpona: Enduring 18 hour work days, beatings from her managers, and a wage of $6 a month when she began work at 12 years old, Kalpona founded an organization for garment workers’ rights in Bangladesh. In 2010 she was arrested, imprisoned and tortured, the government demanding she dissolve the organization or face death.

Nigora: At fourteen, Nigora joins thousands of children forced to pick cotton every year in Uzbekistan –  the second-largest cotton producer in the world. Children are required to work 70 hour days and harvest and carry up to 100 pounds of cotton, for which Nigora says, they are compensated the equivalent of 4 US cents.

Hae-kyung: After she was diagnosed with a rare and severe form of brain cancer at age 23, Hae-kyung discovered there were in fact many Samsung workers disproportionately affected with rare and deadly cancers after working in electronics manufacturing, but the data – which Samsung’s clinics had collected – remained hidden from the workers.

About the Editor :

Corinne Goria is a writer, lawyer and Assistant Editor of Underground America: Narratives of Undocumented Lives, Voice of Witness’ collection of oral histories from undocumented immigrants in the United States. She is based in San Diego.

We are continuing to link up with local, national and international organizations, scholars and human rights leaders to gather narratives. If you know of persons affected by human rights crises related to the global economy who may be interested in voicing their story in this book, please contact: corinne.goria@voiceofwitness.com.

Our Partners:

In order to conduct interviews of those most affected by human rights crises in the global economy, Voice of Witness has partnered with numerous organizations and scholars, among them:

International Labor Rights Forum (ILRF)

Sweatfree Communities

Good Electronics

Basel Action Network (BAN)

Students and Scholars Against Corporate Misbehavior (SACOM) (Hong Kong)

Bangladesh Centre for Worker Solidarity (BCWIS)

Citizens for a Better Environment (Zambia),

Annie Leonard’s The Story of Stuff Project

Pesticide Action Network (PANNA)

EcoViva (El Salvador)

Centro de Apoyo del Trabajador (Puebla, Mexico)

NISGUA (Guatemala)

International Coalition for Responsible Technology (ICRT)

Uzbek-German Human Rights Forum

International Campaign for Justice in Bhopal

International Longshore & Warehouse Workers’ Union (ILWU)

Supporters for the Health And Rights of People in the Semiconductor industry (SHARPS)

California Rural Legal Assistance

Dr. Lisa Rofel, Professor and Chair, Department of Anthropology, UC Santa Cruz; Dr. Ching Kwan Lee, Professor of Sociology at UCLA; Dr. Alastair Fraser, Professor of Political Science, Cambridge University; Dr. Miles Larmer, University of Sheffield; and Dr. Gregor Murray of the University of Montreal are among the contributing scholars for this book.

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Voice of Witness is a nonprofit book series that empowers those most closely affected by contemporary social injustice. Using oral history as a foundation, the series depicts human rights crises around the world through the stories of the men and women who experience them. Voice of Witness was founded by author Dave Eggers and physician/human rights scholar Lola Vollen, and is the nonprofit division of McSweeney's Books.