Sweatshop Boycotts: Can’t Live With Them, Can’t Live Without Them

Originally published in Free Market Institute

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This paper explores the moral permissibility of sweatshop boycotts.  We build explicitly on Tomhave and Vopat’s (2018) framework for evaluating the moral permissibility of boycotts in general for the specific case of sweatshop labor. We argue that sweatshop boycotts are more likely to be morally justified when targeting forced labor compared to free labor and we explore the relevant moral tradeoffs associated with boycotts of free labor sweatshops.  We analyze the morality of three cases of sweatshop boycotts, Indonesian in the 1990s; Bangladesh following the 2013 Rana Plaza disaster; and the Uyghur region in China; and then discuss how insights from these cases might provide a model to guide acvists and business ethicists in analyzing the morality of other sweatshop boyco s.