Social Control Archive

Death on the lake: British oil company’s role in Congo killings exposed

[responsivevoice_button] Five years since the killing of six Congolese, including a

Blacklisted workers and NHS staff challenge construction companies

[responsivevoice_button] Corporate Watch delves into the shady world of worker blacklists,

Blacklisted agency workers cannot be protected by court

[responsivevoice_button] The Central London Employment Tribunal has ruled that, although security

Corporate engagement at Hopenhagen

[responsivevoice_button] Corporations have multiple strategies for dealing with criticism from grassroots

April 6, 2011: News in brief – Watching the Corporations

 [responsivevoice_button] -G4S wins £100m Olympics security contract -BP to resume drilling

The true cost of tickets for the Olympics: community and workplace organising?

[responsivevoice_button] Official prestige tickets for the 2012 Olympics, which include food

Bosses step in to protect scab companies as firefighters are hospitalised

[responsivevoice_button] The Fire Brigades Union (FBU) had planned to hold a

DFID in India VI: False promises

 [responsivevoice_button] The final part of the Dodgy Development: DFID in India

World Cup strikes may be stopped

[responsivevoice_button] A month before football’s World Cup in South Africa, workers

Vale-Inco strike now longest in Sudbury Basin history

[responsivevoice_button] The longest industrial dispute in over 100 years of mining

Dodgy Development III: A DFID Education

 [responsivevoice_button] Richard Whittell and Eshwarappa M’s study of the British Government’s

Local fisherman and anti-Shell campaigner jailed for 7 months in County Mayo

[responsivevoice_button] A number of key campaigners and activists opposed to Shell’s

Dodgy development: DfID in India

[responsivevoice_button] India is the biggest single recipient of British aid, with

Blacklisting workers in the construction industry

[responsivevoice_button] Trade union members and other ‘troublemakers’ in the UK have

Police condone covert Internet surveillance

[responsivevoice_button] The City of London police have recently dropped their inquiries