To pay or not to pay: Asda and Argos choose workfare over work
[responsivevoice_button] The campaign against workfare has claimed some major successes over
February 17, 2012 : ‘The whole thing has been done in a very misleading manner’: residents speak out against Asda’s Ferring superstore plans
[responsivevoice_button] Residents of the coastal village of Ferring in West
Grassroots Resistance against new coal-fired power station in Turkey
[responsivevoice_button] There is something going on in Gerze, a little village
Profiting from ‘peanuts’: the DFID’s new plans in India
[responsivevoice_button] There has been a predictably indignant reaction to the news
Battle over fracking continues
[responsivevoice_button] A new report has found that exploiting shale gas reserves
Asylum seekers to be housed by prison guards
[responsivevoice_button] The UK Border Agency has announced that its preferred bidders
Charitable exploitation: workfare in Barnardo’s
[responsivevoice_button] It’s not only multinationals that are benefiting from the free
Under the microscope: pathology gets the Serco treatment
[responsivevoice_button] GSTS Pathology, the joint venture between Serco, ‘the biggest company
The new trend of biomass plantations in Brazil: tree monocultures
[responsivevoice_button] Winnie Overbeek from the World Rainforest Movement (WRM) reports for
Resistance to fracking gains momentum
[responsivevoice_button] Last week saw a number of significant events in the
‘It’s exploitation and it’s repellent’: Retailers, councils and charities benefiting from workfare
[responsivevoice_button] TK Maxx, Wilkinsons, Savers and Matalan have been named as
Compulsory O2 mobiles for Yarl’s Wood detainees
[responsivevoice_button] New detainees arriving at Yarl’s Wood immigration prison, run by
Serco accused of negligence and assault in Australia
[responsivevoice_button] Events in Australia over the last month have shown outsourcing
Resistance against tar sands and Keystone XL pipeline growing stronger
[responsivevoice_button] In the two weeks up to 3rd September, 1,253 people