What Does Winning Look Like

Wed Apr 05 2023 at 03:30 pm to 08:00 pm

National Endowment for Democracy | Washington, D.C.

National Endowment for Democracy
Publisher/HostNational Endowment for Democracy
What Does Winning Look Like
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Join NED and GLJ-ILRF for a discussion and reception to reflect on one year since the end of state-imposed forced labor in Uzbek cotton
About this Event
What Does Winning Look Like: Investing in Labor Rights Campaigns to Foster Change in Repressive Systems

This event will be held in-person only. Light refreshments and alcohol will be served. All guests consuming alcohol must provide ID. All guests must provide proof of Covid-19 vaccination upon entry to NED’s offices.

Please email [email protected] to register as a member of the press.

ABOUT THE EVENT

Panels: 3:30 – 5:30 p.m. 

Reception: 5:30 – 8:00 p.m.

In March 2022, the Cotton Campaign, a global coalition against forced labor, announced that it was ending its call for a global boycott of Uzbek cotton. The Coalition made this decision following the 2021 harvest: Uzbek Forum for Human Rights, a frontline partner of the Cotton Campaign that has monitored the annual cotton harvest since 2010, found no state-imposed forced labor for the first time in years. This landmark achievement marked the elimination of state-imposed forced labor in Uzbekistan’s cotton harvest, which had affected millions of children and adults. Despite these gains, civic space and fundamental labor rights in Uzbekistan remain arbitrarily restricted and farmers face exploitation, jeopardizing reforms in the cotton sector.

Turkmenistan remains one of the most closed and repressive countries in the world. Every year during the harvest, the government continues to force tens of thousands of public sector workers to pick cotton in hazardous and unsanitary conditions and extorts money from public employees to pay harvest expenses. To this day, the government continues to deny the forced labor problem and has taken harsh actions against those who report on abuses.

Please join the National Endowment for Democracy and Global Labor Justice-International Labor Rights Forum for an in-person, two-panel discussion and reception to reflect on one year since the end of state-imposed forced labor in Uzbek cotton—including the implications for global cotton supply chains, next steps in Uzbekistan, and making labor rights gains in Turkmenistan and the Uyghur region. The panels will place the fight for workers’ rights in Central Asia in the broader context of global supply chains and supply chain governance. This has been given new prominence and urgency by systematic forced labor as part of genocide and crimes against humanity perpetrated by the government of China against the Uyghur and other Turkic and/or Muslim-majority peoples.


ABOUT THE SPEAKERS

Opening Remarks

Shawna Bader-Blau- Executive Director, Solidarity Center

Kelly M. Fay Rodríguez- Special Representative for International Labor Affairs, U.S. Department of State

JJ Rosenbaum- Executive Director, GLJ-ILRF

Panelists

Ruslan Myatiev- Founder and Editor, Turkmen.News

Umida Niyazova- Director, Uzbek Forum for Human Rights

Allison Gill- Forced Labor Program Director, GLJ-ILRF

Bennett Freeman- Cotton Campaign co-founder and former U.S. Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Democracy, Human Rights and Labor

Patricia Jurewicz- Cotton Campaign co-founder and founder and CEO, Responsible Sourcing Network

Spaska Gatzinska (Moderator)- Deputy Director, Eurasia, National Endowment for Democracy

Additional Panelists to be Announced

Header image adapted from image courtesy of NED grantee Uzbek Forum for Human Rights.

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Event Venue & Nearby Stays

National Endowment for Democracy, 1201 Pennsylvania Ave. NW, Washington, D.C., United States

Tickets

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