Veteran labour activist Liu Shaoming is scheduled to be released from jail on 28 November after serving a four and a half year sentence for “inciting subversion of state power.”
Read more...Government slams lack of safety training in high-risk industries
Only 20 percent of the 18 million workers employed in high-risk industries in China such as mining, hazardous chemicals, fireworks and metal smelting have received formal vocational training.
Read more...Shanxi coal mine explosion leaves 15 dead and nine injured
A gas explosion at a coal mine in the northern Chinese province of Shanxi on the afternoon of 18 November killed 15 miners and injured another nine, China’s official media reported today.
Read more...The shifting patterns of transport worker protests in China present a major challenge to the trade union
Strikes by transport workers have long been a feature of daily life in China’s cities but in the last five years there has been a noticeable shift in the nature of these protests, driven primarily by the rapid growth of app-based transport services and the decline of traditional services.
Read more...Squeezed on all sides, China’s retail workers respond with collective action
China Labour Bulletin’s Strike Map has recorded 58 strikes and collective protests by retail workers so far this year, accounting for nearly five percent of all worker protests.
Read more...Understanding worker protests at Chinese enterprises in Vietnam
Low pay, poor working conditions and abusive managers are well documented at many Chinese-owned enterprises in Vietnam, as are the strikes and protests staged by workers in response. Joe Buckley examines several recent such protests and suggests that these problems are not just confined to Chinese enterprises but are found across Vietnam, regardless of enterprise ownership.
Read more...Trade union officials in Shandong struggle to get up to speed in organizing delivery workers
Most trade union officials in Shandong understood that they had a responsibility to organize delivery workers but seemed unable to shake off their traditional shackles and find a way to cut through the red tape.
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