iFoxconn: The Corporation’s Role and the “Harder Problem” of Wages – Part II
International Justice Should Play a Part in a Corporation’s Role There are at least three compelling reasons to think that it would not go too far, however, to say that concerns for international justice should play a part in the role of prosperous corporations that do business in the developing world. First, these corporations have [...]
iFoxconn: The Corporation’s Role and the “Harder Problem” of Wages – Part I
(Editor’s Note: This is Part I of a two part series. Look forward to the next installment, which will be published on Friday morning.)
A Foxconn factory likely created the device you’re using to read this post as Foxconn manufactures over 40 percent of the world’s electronics for companies including Apple, Dell, Amazon, Sony, and Motorola. Headquartered in Taiwan, Foxconn employs over 1.2 million people, making it China’s largest private employer. Recent reports about Foxconn, summarized below, raise challenging normative questions related to the social responsibilities of corporations and separate yet related matters of international justice. More specifically, to what extent should a successful American company ensure that its suppliers and subcontractors are paying their workers [...]
Serious Violations at Apple’s Chinese Factories
An audit of Foxconn Technology Group, the biggest maker of Apple Inc. devices, revealed at least 50 violations of Chinese regulations as well as the code of conduct Apple signed when it joined the Fair Labor Association (FLA) in January after a string of suicides at Foxconn’s plants. Foxconn’s average working week exceeded both China’s [...]
POSTED IN Comparative Law

- Fordham Corporate Center