Child Labor and Sweatshops | Table of Contents
- Child Labor and Sweatshops: An Overview
by Charles S. Clark
- An Indictment of Sweatshops
by Olivia Given
- A Defense of Sweatshops
by Murray Weidenbaum
- Sweatshops Must Be Recognized as a Human Rights Violation
by Timothy Ryan
- Sweatshops Often Benefit the Economies of Developing Nations
by Allen R. Myerson
- Child Labor Is Beneficial
by Hannah Lapp
- The United States Should Ban Imports of Products Made by Children
by Tom Harkin
- Efforts to Ban Goods Made by Children Are Counterproductive
by Shahidul Alam
- Consumer Pressure Can Reduce the Use of Sweatshops
by Linda F. Golodner
- Efforts to Reduce the Use of Sweatshops Are Misguided
by Irwin M. Stelzer
- International Partnerships Must Reduce the Use of Child Labor
by Navin Narayan
- Campaigns Against Child Labor Are Protectionist and Imperialist
by Llewellyn H. Rockwell
- Workplace Codes Could Prevent Sweatshop Abuses
by Michael Posner and Lynda Clarizio
- Workplace Codes Will Not Prevent Sweatshop Abuses
by Medea Benjamin
- Product Labeling Programs May Not Reduce Child Labor
by Julie V. Iovine
- Youth Activism Can Help Reduce Child Labor
by Craig Kielburger, interviewed by Multinational
- Educators Should Encourage Student Activism Against the Use of Sweatshops
by Steven Friedman
