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Artigo

13 nov 2025

Author:
Cornell University

India: Dindigul Agreement on gender-based violence & harassment has been successful, study finds

"Assessment of a Unique Agreement to End Gender-Based Violence and Harassment in Apparel Factories", 13 November 2025

The Dindigul Agreement to End Gender-based Violence and Harassment (GBVH) has been successful in empowering women to identify and combat gender-based violence in the workplace, largely due to a strong female-led union and a productive labor-management relationship, according to a recent assessment by Cornell’s Global Labor Institute.

The Dindigul Agreement brought together global brands, such as Gap Inc., PVH Corp. and H&M, as well as international NGOs, union groups like Global Labor Justice and Asia Floor Wage Alliance, and a local union – Tamilnadu Textile and Common Labor Union and the Management of Natchi Apparel (P) Ltd. and the Eastman Spinning Mills (P) Ltd. – in Dindigul, India in 2022 to create a unique agreement to end gender-based violence...

“It shows that it is possible to empower marginalized women workers to combat gender-based violence at both the workplace and in their communities, through the establishment of a women-led labor union, and a multi-point grievance procedure, anchored by a high degree of labor management collaboration.

“Women are trained in gender-based violence all over the world, but when they face violence, they can only speak up about it if they have systems in place to report it and a strong union at their back.”...

He found that the Dindigul Agreement was successful for the workers and in meeting the objectives of its creators, but the specific factors involved make it unclear whether it could work elsewhere.

“Before the union was formed in the factory, it was operating in the villages, in the communities where many of the workers lived,” Kuruvilla said. “So, the union was already working with women to help them deal with domestic violence and other issues in the community. As a result, this was an organization that already had a great amount of legitimacy with workers when they entered the factories.”

Whether the terms of the agreement could work elsewhere would depend on costs and contexts, the study found...

Since gender-based violence is an urgent and global problem, Kuruvilla said...scalable solutions are necessary...one possibility is to include gender-based violence and harassment as a key subject in free trade agreements, such as the US-Mexico-Canada (USMCA) agreement...

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