Charles Kernaghan

Charles Kernaghan (born c. 1948) is the executive director of the Institute for Global Labour and Human Rights, formerly known as the National Labor Committee in Support of Human and Worker Rights (), currently headquartered in Pittsburgh. He is known for speaking out against sweatshops, corporate greed and the appalling living and working conditions of impoverished workers around the world.

Charles Kernaghan
Born1948
OccupationExecutive Director, Institute for Global Labour and Human Rights
Known forAnti-sweatshop movement

In 1996, he publicly accused Kathie Lee Gifford of being responsible for sweatshop conditions in the manufacturing of her Wal-Mart clothing line. She responded on the air by explaining that she was a celebrity endorser and not involved with hands-on project management in manufacturing plants.[1] Kernaghan alleged during congressional testimony that child laborers in Honduras and New York City were making clothing lines under the names of Gifford and other celebrities.[2] Gifford engaged the White House as well and worked with President Bill Clinton to address the situation.[3]

The coverage of the investigations was so widespread that the media began to refer to it as "the summer of the sweatshop." The investigation affected many companies not targeted in the case, and the president of the American Apparel and Footwear Association has said of the controversy, "We remember that every day and that's a lesson to us, the fact that we don't want that to happen again. As a result of that, you had an industry begin to mobilize itself to make certain that, over time, they produce their products in the most responsible manner to make certain that employees are treated with dignity and respect."[4]

Since then he has given testimonies to the U.S. Congress as well as the United Nations. Kernaghan has travelled to Central America, China, Bangladesh, India, Jordan and other developing countries and has spoken with thousands of workers, from hundreds of workplaces. He has targeted the likes of some of the largest multinationals in the world, including Walmart, Nike, Disney, GAP, Alcoa, Victoria's Secret, Major League Baseball, the NBA, NFL, Nygård International, Hanesbrands, Target Corporation, Kmart, and many others. Some of the work he has done over the years has caused him some trouble. He is currently persona non grata in El Salvador.

AFL-CIO president John Sweeney said Kernaghan, "Because of Charlie's crusades ... we're beginning to learn the awful truth about workers around the world who are slaving away their lives in sweatshops, who are denied the right to join or form a union in order to fight back a provide a better life for their families."[5]

Noam Chomsky said of Kernaghan in The Nation that the anti-sweatshop movement is in some ways, he said, "like the antiapartheid movement, except that in this case it's striking at the core of the relations of exploitation. It's another example of how different constituencies are working together. Much of this was initiated by Charlie Kernaghan of the National Labor Committee in New York and other groups within the labor movement."[6]

In May 2006, Kernaghan's organization exposed the plight of thousands of victims of human trafficking in Jordan, working in sweatshops in free trade zones making clothing for export to the United States. The New York Times quoted him as saying, "These are the worst conditions I've ever seen."[7]

Kernaghan has been a frequent guest on Democracy Now!,[8] and has also been interviewed many times on Pacifica Radio stations WBAI, New York and KPFA, Berkeley. He has appeared on GRITtv with Laura Flanders.

Background

Kernaghan was born one of three children Brooklyn to Roman Catholic immigrant parents. His mother was Czech, his father Scottish.[9] Kernaghan obtained a B.A. degree in 1970 from LeMoyne College in Syracuse, N.Y.

gollark: I see.
gollark: Anyway, I have no idea how to or whether I am supposed to respond to this sort of thing given that I am not looking for jobs and cannot really take any.
gollark: Maybe they're working on an actually suitable tokenizer. Imagine the sheer efficiency.
gollark: Well, I got a T-shirt which unfortunately doesn't fit me very well.
gollark: (it's from a while ago, my email is checked at entirely arbitrary intervals)

References

  1. Kathie Lee Gifford's clothing line and its connection to sweatshop work Archived 2006-02-22 at the Wayback Machine
  2. "Keeper of the Fire", Mother Jones, July/August 2003
  3. "Companies agree to meet on 'sweatshops'. The Washington Post, John F. Harris, Peter McKay. August 3, 1996, Page A10. "Pres Clinton stood side-by-side at the White House Aug 2, 1996 with talk show host Kathie Lee Gifford and a delegation of leading executives from the apparel industry to announce ..."
  4. "The Man Who Made Kathie Lee Cry", Washington Post, July 31, 2005
  5. 50th Anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights Conference, Hunter College, New York City, December 4, 1998.
  6. "Talking 'Anarchy' With Chomsky", The Nation, April 5, 2000
  7. "An Ugly Side Of Free Trade: Sweatshops in Jordan," The New York Times, May 3, 2006
  8. SHOWS FEATURING CHARLES KERNAGHAN. Democracy Now!
  9. "Keeper of the Fire", Mother Jones, op. cit
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