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Publication
Company Profile: Amazon
Amazon’s policies should position it as an industry leader on a variety of inequality metrics, though from publicly available data, it is evident that the company’s business practices drive inequality across all four pillars – People, Power, Profits, and Planet.
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News update
Urgent: The Amazon rainforest burns
The “lungs of the world”—are burning at an alarming rate. The Amazon rainforest covers millions of square miles across nine countries, including Bolivia, where an area roughly the size of Delaware has been destroyed.
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First Person
Amazon oil struggle still bubbling
People are fighting for their rights all over the world and achieving great things. Why aren’t we telling these stories?
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Publication
Broken at the top
How America’s dysfunctional tax system costs billions in corporate tax dodging
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In recent years, industrial-scale production of commodities like palm oil and cocoa has been introduced in Peru and Colombia. The rapid expansion of the
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A new report reveals warehouse workers are suffering under oppressive working conditions amid record company profits.
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Madre de Dios could be next flashpoint in ongoing confrontation between indigenous communities and foreign oil, gas, and mining companies.
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Politics of Poverty
Protecting the Amazon means protecting local communities
Protecting tropical forests means protecting the rights of indigenous peoples, local communities, and front-line defenders who are finding that their land and ways of life are under threat from unchecked agribusiness expansion.
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Politics of Poverty
Amazon, listening to workers is good business
Oxfam will be attending the Annual General Meeting of Amazon this week to speak in support of our shareholder resolution, which would put an hourly associate on the Board. Our message is simple: Amazon, listen to your workers.
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Politics of Poverty
Chevron’s last gasps in its fight against the Amazon?
Communities from the Ecuadorian Amazon may finally have what they need to hold Chevron-Texaco accountable for the billions of gallons of oil and toxic wastes dumped into their lands and water.