From: [email protected] 
Sent: Monday, February 13, 2012 4:15 PM
 
WHAT: Bassam Haddad speaking on 

"Syria's Authoritative Regime." 

WHEN: THIS WEDNESDAY, February 15, 7 PM 

WHERE: Levantine Cultural Center ,5998 W. Pico Blvd, Los Angeles. (between
La Cienega and Fairfax; ample street parking)

Entry: $10 suggested donation; $5 for students 

RSVP: 310-657-5511 or 

 
<http://www.levantinecenter.org/event/bassam-haddad-syrias-authoritarian-reg
ime>
http://www.levantinecenter.org/event/bassam-haddad-syrias-authoritarian-regi
me 

OTHER COMING EVENTS

Ilan Pappe: 

Feb. 20 at CSUN 4 PM Feb 24 at UCLA at 3 PM 

Sarah's War:

Feb. 16 - March 18, Thursdays through Sundays, at Hudson Theatre

Bassam Haddad on SyriaSyria expert Bassam Haddad will profile Syria's
political economy, business networks, and the resilience of the Al-Assad
regime. In addition he will discuss the uprising in Syria, its dynamics, and
its broader implications in the region and for international politics.

Haddad's new book,  <http://www.sup.org/book.cgi?id=18447> Business Networks
in Syria: The Political Economy of Authoritarian Resilience (2011), reviews
the politics and economics of reform in Syria. Haddad is Director of the
Middle East Studies Program at George Mason and teaches in the Department of
Public and International Affairs. He is Visiting Professor at Georgetown
University.

This talk is part of the Progressive Conversations on Israel/Palestine and
US Foreign Policy in the Middle East, a monthly speakers series presented by
LA Jews for Peace, Jewish Voice for Peace-Los Angeles, and Friends of
Sabeel, in association with Levantine Cultural Center.


Jeff Warner
LA Jews for Peace
www.LAJewsforPeace.org <http://www.lajewsforpeace.org/>  
 
http://www.inthesetimes.com/working/entry/12733/trader_joes_caves_to_coaliti
on_of_immokalee_workers_signs_fair_food_agreeme/

Trader Joe's Caves to Coalition of Immokalee Workers, Signs Fair Food
Agreement

By  <http://inthesetimes.com/community/profile/164218> Josh Eidelson
In These Times: Monday Feb 13, 2012 
 
 
<http://www.inthesetimes.com/images/made/images/working/slaveryinthesupplych
ain_615_327.jpg> 

The dispute has been going strong for some time. Here, a CIW supporter
pickets a Trader Joe's in Manhattan on February 28, 2011 (Mario Tama/Getty
Images)

Months-long pressure campaign pays off

On Thursday, the Coalition of Immokalee Workers announced it had signed a
Fair Food Agreement with Trader Joe's, a significant step forward its
efforts to bring fairness and accountability to the food industry. "We are
truly happy today to welcome Trader Joe's aboard the Fair Food Program,"
CIW's Gerardo Reyes said in a joint statement issued by CIW and Trader
Joe's. "Trader Joe's is cherished by its customers for a number of reasons,
but high on that list is the company's commitment to ethical purchasing
practices."

The same statement, which the company has
<http://www.traderjoes.com/about/customer-updates-responses.asp?i=60> posted
as a letter to customers on its website, hails Fair Food as "a
groundbreaking approach to social responsibility in the U.S. produce
industry that combines the Fair Food Code of Conduct...with a small price
premium to help improve harvesters' wages." Trader Joe's did not respond to
a request for further comment.

But it wasn't long ago that activists were carrying "Traitor Joe's" banners,
and Trader Joe's was
<http://www.traderjoes.com/pdf/attachments/Note-to-Customers-about-Florida-T
omatoes.pdf> condemning Fair Food Agreements as "overreaching, ambiguous,
and improper."

Trader Joe's' reversal follows a months-long campaign. As Michelle Chen has
<http://www.inthesetimes.com/working/entry/11804/coailition_of_imokalee_work
ers_brings_farmworker_justice_to_the_street/> reported for In These Times,
it included "Trader Joe's tours" last summer that picketed stores, educated
consumers, and met with allies along the East and West Coasts. 

In Boston, a group of fifth graders organized a rally outside a store. In
New York, activists held a 1.6 mile run between two stores. The announcement
of the settlement came on the eve of two planned days of coordinated protest
pegged to the grand opening of Trader Joe's' first-ever Florida location.
That store, the company's 367th, is located on Immokalee Road in Naples, 35
miles from the fields where the CIW was born.

CIW announced Thursday that Friday's and Saturday's demonstrations, planned
for Naples and 32 other cities, were being cancelled or replaced with
actions targeting Fair Food holdout Publix instead.

CIW is a workers' organization that partners with faith, labor, and consumer
groups to push improvements in farm workers' working conditions and voice on
the job. It's part of a growing trend of labor activism that takes place
outside of the protections and restrictions of the National Labor Relations
Act. CIW's Trader Joe's agreement is the latest in a series of victories
achieved through comprehensive campaigns that leverage consumer and media
pressure at strategic points in the tomato supply chain. 

CIW achieved national prominence during its multi-year boycott of Taco Bell,
which successfully forced the fast food giant to absorb the cost-a penny per
pound-of modest labor reforms for workers in the fields. The three other
largest fast food chains later followed suit.

CIW took the momentum from these victories-and the promise of an extra
penny-and turned its focus to the growers who directly employ tomato
growers.

As Kari Lyderson has
<http://www.inthesetimes.com/working/entry/6580/immokalee_workers_win_again/
> reported for In These Times, agreements with major growers in 2010 mean
that 90 percent of U.S. tomatoes come from growers who have signed Fair Food
agreements. CIW estimates that more than 10,000 farm workers are now covered
by these agreements. They include basic standards on wages and working
conditions as well as a complaint procedure, independent auditing, and
meetings between workers and management to monitor compliance. CIW is
currently training farm workers on their rights under Fair Food Agreements,
and how to enforce them.

Following its agreements with fast-food chains and growers, CIW turned its
attention to another point the tomato supply chain: supermarkets. For these
companies, signing a Fair Food Agreement means a commitment to absorb the
penny-per-pound cost, source tomatoes only from growers that are complying
with a Fair Food Agreement, and meet with CIW regarding compliance. Absent
buy-in from supermarkets, CIW warned, growers that are currently abiding by
Fair Food Agreements could violate them in the future, secure in the
knowledge that noncompliance would not cost them supermarket business.

Throughout the months that it rebuffed CIW's call for a Fair Food Agreement,
Trader Joe's insisted that it was already paying the extra penny-per-pound.
Given that major growers were already signed on, that may well have been
true-which suggests that Trader Joe's true objection may have been less
about spending money than about sacrificing power.

Although CIW never called a boycott of Trader Joe's, "it was always a
possibility if we needed to get there," says CIW staffer Julia Perkins. In
November, CIW sent an e-mail promoting a campaign by the New York Community/
Farmworker Alliance to send "Dear Joe" letters breaking up with the company
over its refusal to sign a Fair Food Agreement. "The persistence of fair
food activists," says Perkins, "and of their consumers too, who kept going
over and over to them.helped to show them that this was something they
wanted to do."

In August interviews (
<http://www.alternet.org/story/151985/why_won%27t_supposedly_progressive_tra
der_joe%27s_sign_an_agreement_not_to_sell_slave_labor_tomatoes_it_will_only_
cost_a_penny_per_pound/> for Alternet) during their East Coast Trader Joe's
Tour, Immokalee tomato workers Oscar Otzoy and Wilson Perez described how
the 2010 agreements had, along with improving their wages, changed their
working conditions: managers stopped rampantly stealing wages, denying
breaks, and demanding sex in exchange for less strenuous assignments.

Their pay remains well short of a living wage. But for the first time, said
Perez, "We have a voice in the camps."

Whole Foods was the first major supermarket to sign a Fair Food Agreement;
Trader Joe's is the second. Perkins says Trader Joe's "didn't agree to
anything less" than Whole Foods had in its own agreement. CIW's next major
target is Publix, which has been refusing requests to sign an agreement. 

CIW and religious allies have announced a six-day protest fast outside
Publix headquarters that will begin March 5. Publix, charges Perkins, is
"not just turning their back and refusing to meet with us, but really being
a blockade in the road to truly changing conditions for farmworkers." But
she expects Publix will eventually follow Trader Joe's and Publix in signing
on to the Fair Food model. "It's really the future of the industry."


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