SHARPS (Supporters for the Health And Rights of People in the Semiconductor Industry)


Mission Statement


- On November 20, 2007, 19 civil society organizations formed a joint committee


SHARPS is a non-governmental organization dedicated to protecting the health and human rights of workers in the semiconductor and electronics industries.


We work to achieve recognition of occupational diseases affecting semiconductor workers and support workers so they can work in safe and healthy conditions. Our activities include counseling and assistance for victims of occupational illnesses, support for workers’ compensation claims, research on workplace hazards, advocacy for policy and institutional reform, and solidarity with domestic and international labor and human rights organizations.


Through these efforts, SHARPS seeks to prevent industrial diseases, ensure corporate accountability, and promote dignity, safety, and justice for all workers in the semiconductor and electronics industries.




[2020-11] "The politics of science and undone protection in the Samsung case leukemia case"

반올림
2023-07-14
조회수 750

Kim, Jongyoung, Heeyun Kim, et Jawoon Lim. « The Politics of Science and Undone Protection in the “Samsung Leukemia” Case ». East Asian Science, Technology and Society: An International Journal 14, no 4 (1 décembre 2020): 573‑601. https://doi.org/10.1215/18752160-8770884.   


The Politics of sience and undone protection in the "Samsung leukemia" case


Abstract:

"A labor health dispute between a multinational corporation and patient-workers in Korea received enormous attention from 2007 to 2018, when it was finally and successfully resolved. Sick workers of Samsung Semiconductor claimed they were contaminated by toxic chemicals at their workplace that resulted in their sickness, a contested illness known as “Samsung leukemia.” In this dispute, the Korean government and Samsung used epistemological studies to deny the workers’ claims. The patient-workers politicized the industrial disease, forming a labor health movement that advocated for workers’ rights and welfare. In this long disputed process, they developed their own bottom-up science that collected evidence from their factories and connected this evidence with the claims of counter-experts. They made done “undone science,” which investigated the relationship between the unknown disease and the semiconductor industry. But the undone science has been constructed in the context of “undone protection” stemming not only from chemical exposure in factories that weigh
profit over safety but also from institutional failures to protect and compensate the loss of workers’ lives and health. The successful resolution of the “Samsung leukemia” case depended on a health movement that worked toward getting undone science and undone protection done simultaneously."

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