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    Sweet and Sour: An investigation of conditions on tropical fruit farms in North-East Brazil

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    English paper
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    Author(s)
    Williams, Peter
    Publication date
    2019-10-10
    Subject
    Food and livelihoods
    Governance and citizenship
    Private sector
    Rights
    Trade
    Keywords

    Tropical fruit
    Mango
    Melon
    Grapes
    Supermarket
    Supply chains
    Food
    Private sector
    Workers rights
    Fairtrade
    Human rights
    Business
    Minimum wage
    Poverty
    Inequality
    Fruit growing
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    Country
    Brazil
    
    Metadata
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    Publisher(s)
    Oxfam
    Document type
    Briefing paper
    Description

    A government policy of periodically raising the minimum wage, proactive enforcement of the minimum wage, and clear labour laws have raised incomes and reduced inequality between men and women workers in Brazil over the past 20 years. However, these gains are now at risk from recent labour reforms. 

    This briefing paper, part of Oxfam’s campaign to end human suffering in food supply chains, looks at in-work poverty and labour rights abuses faced by seasonal workers in Brazil’s tropical fruit sector, which supplies many major international supermarket chains.

    It argues for transparency from supermarkets about their fruit supply chains and for the Brazilian government to continue to raise minimum wages and strengthen labour protections in order to address poverty and reduce inequality.

    The research presented in this paper identifies good practice in resolving and preventing labour rights abuses through collective bargaining agreements, which could be a model to improve wages and working conditions in supply chains globally. 

    Pages
    38
    DOI
    10.21201/2019/4887
    ISBN
    978-1-78748-488-7
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10546/620875
    Additional Links
    http://policy-practice.oxfam.org.uk/publications/sweet-and-sour-an-investigation-of-conditions-on-tropical-fruit-farms-in-north-620875
    ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
    10.21201/2019/4887
    Scopus Count
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    Policy papers & campaign reports

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