This discussion aims to review the emergence of the ?Accord on Fire and Building Safety in
Bangladesh? signed on May 13, 2013, and evaluate if it is an international agreement ?breakthrough?.
The Accord is signed not only by the global clothing brands and national garment unions
but also by international trade union organizations, which is a new development. This raises a question:
could this agreement set a new international negotiating precedence in industrial relations
between transnational corporations and international trade union organizations? In Bangladesh,
globalization has played an important role for booming garment industries. Yet, lack of workers?
rights, weak safety situations, and poor working conditions have continuously been reported. Local
and international solidarity movements and garment workers? welfare associations have been
emphasizing workers? rights and better and safer working environments in workplaces since the
beginning of the 1990s. However, their voices were not highly considered even there were some
initiatives. Following the ?Rana Plaza? garment factory building collapse in April 2013, one of the
world?s worst industrial accidents, with more than 1,100 dead workers, some strong measures
have been taken?one of these, signing the ?Accord on Fire and Building Safety in Bangladesh?.
This is a strong achievement of a long struggle to take collective action for improving the safety
in garment factories in Bangladesh. Although the Accord is understood as a game changer or
breakthrough in relation to national and international agreements, do we really know yet if it is a
breakthrough or not when it comes to its implementation?
Author Biography
Zillur Rahman, Working Life Studies Group, Department of Environment,Social and Spatial Change, Roskilde University