WHY WE’RE DIFFERENT
We are the largest U.S.-based international worker rights organization partnering directly with workers and their unions, and supporting their struggle for respect, fair wages, better workplaces and a voice in the global economy.
We value the dignity of work and workers. We know how all the work everyone depends on gets done–who picks the food for your table, cleans your home so you can go to the office, makes your clothes, keeps your streets clean. And at our core is every worker’s right to solve issues through collective action and to form unions.
What’s New
Heat Stress in the Cambodian Workplace
Central Asia: ‘We Must Act Together, Combining Our Efforts’
Workers Defend Right to Strike at International Court of Justice
The Solidarity Center Podcast
BILLIONS OF US, ONE JUST FUTURE
CONVERSATIONS WITH WORKERS (& OTHER SMART PEOPLE) WORLDWIDE SHAPING THE WORKPLACE FOR THE BETTER
Hosted by Solidarity Center Executive Director Shawna Bader-Blau
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Gaming the System: App Workers Rarely Win
Way back when factories were the new thing, there were no rules to stop the big industrialists from paying starvation wages and putting workers’ lives in danger in fire-prone buildings. Today, those out-of-control bosses have been replaced by apps. If apps...
Our work
Programs in
Countries
Reach:
MILLION
Partners with
88 PERCENT OF WHOM ARE GRASSROOTS ORGANIZATIONS
Reaching 70 Million+ People Worldwide
Solidarity Center in the News
[Rest of World] Gig workers on delivery apps rent accounts to get around bans
“Gig workers need to be working more than 12 hours a day, seven days a week across multiple platforms to make a living,” Kruskaya Hidalgo Cordero, who researches gig work platforms at labor rights organization Solidarity Center in Mexico City, told Rest of World....
[Just Style] U.S.-backed project aims to eliminate forced labor in Uzbek cotton supply chain
The agreement involves key stakeholders such as the U.S.-based Center for International Private Enterprise (CIPE), the Association of Cotton-Textile Clusters of Uzbekistan, the Solidarity Center, and the Uzbekistan Ministry of Employment.
[Sourcing Journal] Can a DOL-Backed Program Turn Uzbek Cotton’s ‘Yellow Light’ Green?
The two-year agreement, whose signatories include the Center for International Private Enterprise (CIPE), the Association of Cotton-Textile Clusters of Uzbekistan, the Solidarity Center and the Uzbekistan Ministry of Employment, is a “cornerstone” of a new...