Wednesday, February 01, 2006

Slaves to Fashion: The Sweatshop-Sportswear Connection

THE COMMUNITY CHURCH OF BOSTON
SUNDAY SPEAKERS FORUM presents

Sunday, February 5, 2006 at 11:00am
Superbowl Sunday
ROBERT J.S. ROSS:
"Slaves to Fashion: The Sweatshop-Sportswear Connection"
at Community Church of Boston
565 Boylston St. (Copley Square)
www.commchurch.org


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Robert Ross is professor of Sociology at Clark University, where he is director of the International Studies Stream and among the founders of the program in Urban Development & Social Change. Since the 1980s he has worked on the political economy of urban development and analysis of global capitalism. He still writes occasionally on the social movements of the 1960s, in which he played a role.

In 1995, Prof. Ross began to study the resurgence of sweatshops in the U.S. and global apparel industry, and he has lectured extensively on the issue. His work on this has been published in The Nation, Foreign Affairs, Dollars & Sense and a number of edited collections of research on globalization. He wrote Slaves to Fashion: Poverty and Abuse in the New Sweatshops (Univ. of Michigan Press, 2004).

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SHARE THE MORNING WITH US

10:00am Social Action Committee
11:00am Sunday Speakers Forum
12:30pm Luncheon

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COMMUNITY LUNCHEON

After the Sunday Speakers Forum we share lunch with one another, prepared by Luis Alonso Guzman. We ask for and appreciate your contribution, which helps cover luncheon expenses.

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DIRECTIONS/PARKING

The Community Church is located at 565 Boylston Street in Copley Square, between Dartmouth and Clarendon Streets. Parking is available on Sunday mornings at the Back Bay Garage (entrances on Clarendon Street or St. James Ave.). We can provide a sticker to affix to your parking receipt and
you will be charged only $3 until 1:30pm.

By public transportation, take the Green line to Copley or take the Orange line to Back Bay station. Community Church is a 2-4 minute walk from either station.

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A PEACE AND JUSTICE CONGREGATION SINCE 1920

The Community Church of Boston is a free community of human beings united for the study and practice of universal religion, seeking to apply ethical ideals to individual life and the democratic and cooperative principle to all forms of social and economic life.

1 comment:

Marty Wrin said...

I went to this and had a great time! Bob was an engaging speaker and the Community Church provided a very engaging social justice atmosphere. I bought his book and would be glad to loan it to anybody who is interested in reading it.