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DTSTAMP:20260613T195120
CREATED:20220208T134116Z
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UID:125193-1645527600-1645808400@www.freedomunited.org
SUMMARY:OECD Forum on Due Diligence in the Garment and Footwear Sector
DESCRIPTION:“The OECD Garment Forum convenes representatives from government\, business\, workers and civil society to discuss key issues and risks related to due diligence in global garment and footwear supply chains in a neutral environment. A common denominator of the discussions is the OECD Due Diligence for Responsible Supply Chains in the Garment and Footwear Sector. The OECD Forum pushes the needle by focusing on challenging processes and issues related to due diligence and driving towards solutions. The Forum also plays a role in supporting alignment across governments and industry initiatives on expectations of business. \nThe theme of the 2022 Forum is Rethinking The Business Model For Responsible Supply Chains. Discussions will consider key developments in the sector\, some affecting the very essence of supply chain structures and the capacity of different actors to adopt risk-based due diligence in their day to day activities. A series of panel sessions will explore which type of business models and broader policy initiatives deliver better practice on RBC\, across topics from purchasing practices to supply chain dialogue structures\, from living wages to climate risk mitigation and adaptation\, and from mandatory due diligence to public procurement. Together\, participants will focus on opportunities and next steps for scaling those initiatives that demonstrate impact.” \nFind the full agenda here.
URL:https://www.freedomunited.org/event/oecd-forum-due-diligence/
LOCATION:Online
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20220224T130000
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UID:125423-1645707600-1645718400@www.freedomunited.org
SUMMARY:How did we get here?: History\, Race\, Trafficking and Public Health
DESCRIPTION:“Clinicians\, historians\, and anti-trafficking scholars discuss the connections between history\, public health and social justice. \n\n\n\n\n\n\nAbout this event\n\n\nAs the pandemic continues to disrupt our expectations around social\, financial and political possibilities we’ve come to the collective realization that working towards collective health cannot rely solely on scientific data. The injustice that the pandemic has both revealed and intensified have made it clear that public health requires a collective reckoning with the historic structures of coercion and deprivation that have led to our current moment. \nPlease join the contributors of a remarkable public health textbook\, The Historical Roots of Human Trafficking\, as they consider how the historic forces of racism\, labor exploitation\, and forced migration converge in global labor exploitation that is in itself a public health crisis. In the process we’ll consider how humanities and scientific inquiry can—and must—be in conversation as we face the challenges ahead.” \nPanel 1: 1-1:45\nThe Role of History in Public Health \nMakini Chisolm-Straker\, Associate Professor of Emergency Medicine\, Core Faculty in the Institute for Health Equity Research at (the Icahn School of Medicine at) Mount Sinai \nKatherine Chon\, Co-founder and President Emerita\, Polaris Project\, Brown University \nPanel 2: 1:50-3:15\nHow Does an Engagement with Public Health Shape the Historical Questions We Ask? \nLuis C. deBaca\, Former Ambassador-at-Large to Monitor and Combat Trafficking in Persons; Director of the U.S. The Department of Justice’s “SMART” office; Lecturer\, Univ. of Michigan Law School \nJohn Cheng\, Assoc. Prof\, Department of Asian & Asian American Studies\, SUNY Binghamton \nAnna Mae Duane\, Associate Professor of English & American Studies\, University of Connecticut \nPanel 3: 3:20-4:15 \nPublic Health and History in Practice \nAria Flood\, Director of US Prevention. Love 146 \nErin Williamson\, Vice President of Global Programs\, Love 146 \nMinh Dang\, Executive Director\, Survivor Alliance; Research Fellow in Survivor Wellbeing\, University of Nottingham\, Rights Lab
URL:https://www.freedomunited.org/event/history-race-trafficking-public-health/
LOCATION:Online
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