In this issue:
Politicians back trade unions call for referendum on water services
Larkin Anniversary Lecture
WRC talks concerning LUAS dispute
SIPTU DART drivers to ballot for industrial action
Launch of ONE Cork trade union project
Two days of talks on future of C&C workers in Tipperary
Ballot for industrial action in St. James’s Hospital car park dispute
Friends shock at sudden death of popular SIPTU figure
Legal review and City Council protection scheme welcomed by Clerys workers
Fighting to Save Ireland’s Only Oil Refinery
SIPTU Construction Sector calls for talks on future of Moore Street
Workers Republic
Condemnation of cut in funding to disability services
Dismay at number of work-related fatalities during 2015
Labour Party launches workers’ charter
Evelyn McGuinness retires from SIPTU
Basic English celebrates its 25th Anniversary
Alicia Brady Commemoration
Tara Mines - FETAC Certificates
Meath District Council
Reclaim the Vision of 1916 – the Citizens' Initiative International Poetry Competition
SIPTU Pocket Diary 2016
Fairphone
Thinking aloud about Brexit
The Secret Meeting
European Campaign for Fair Transport
Hands off public water
Tackling long-term unemployment – Can EU recommendation help?
EU to review Written Statement Directive
FREE Online Course for Trade Unionists
Supporting Quality
JLT Home Insurance
One Direct - Car Insurance
Travel Insurance
Taxback
Young Workers Network
SIPTU Basic English Scheme
Larkin Credit Union
Fair Hotel
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Fairphone

Trade union members face a challenge when we want to buy a phone or a laptop: the long and obscure supply chains mean we cannot be sure that the materials and components are produced to ethical standards. PSEU member Cathal Kelly reports on the efforts of a Dutch social enterprise to bring an ethical smartphone to the market.

On Christmas Eve 2013, Fairphone delivered its first phones to customers. The original plan in 2010 had been different: to start an awareness-raising campaign on the use of two conflict minerals – coltan and tin – in consumer electronics and their role in funding warlords in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. But researching the supply chain led Fairphone’s founder and CEO, Bas van Abel, to conclude the only way to uncover the story behind the production chains was for Fairphone itself to make a phone.

“Our goal was to understand the system and see if things could be done differently if you produced a phone putting social values at the base of your mission”, says van Abel.

With its shift from a campaiging organisation to a manufacturer, Fairphone added other social concerns to its ambition. The company’s social aims now include the rights of workers in the Chinese factory where Fairphones are made, along with the environmental impact of the device, including safe recycling, and the longevity of the product, in particular making it repairable.

Making a device that is designed to last goes against the grain of the mainstream of the consumer electronics industry, where many companies plan for their products to go out of date after a few years. A longer-lasting phone was important for Ciarán Swan, a SIPTU member in the Houses of the Oireachtas, who paid out over €500 in the summer 2015 for a Fairphone 2 that was not due to be delivered until December.

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