Author: Sally Blundell
A completely new investigation of the fair trade phenomenon, from the origins to what it is likely to become.
This completely new investigation of the fair trade phenomenon looks in depth at the emergence over the last two decades of a movement that aims to challenge the ethical foundations of the global market. While transnational corporations engage in a race to the bottom for the cheapest suppliers, the fair trade movement insists on a premium for the producers at the start of the chain – for the coffee producer in Colombia, the cocoa farmer in Ghana or the olive grower in Palestine. Yet even as the fair trade movement has gained momentum it has hit problems of its own – some have been angered by the granting of a Fairtrade mark to the biggest food corporations, worried that it is becoming just another kind of promotion.
Sally Blundell uncovers the origins of fair trade, looks at examples from all over the world of how it is working and asks what it is likely to become.
Sally Blundell is a freelance journalist and writer in Christchurch, New Zealand. She has conducted research, interviews and reports for Trade Aid, New Zealand’s largest fair trade organization. She has written a history of the Trade Aid Movement.
| ISBN-13: | 978-1-78026-133-1 |
|---|---|
| Format: | Paperback |
| Page extent: | 140 |
| Dimensions: | 180 mm x 110 mm |
| Publication date: | September 2013 |
Date added: January 23, 2013
Anti-Muslim fervour is rife – yet is being ignored by the authorities, says Lewis Garland.
Mari Marcel Thekaekara congratulates the country’s Dalit community on finally winning legal protection against discrimination.
‘The Wicked Witch is dead’ but although he’s celebrating, Alan Hughes urges us to fight on against everything she stood for.
Argument: Is it time to ditch the pursuit of economic growth?
As Mother’s Day approaches in India, Mari Marcel Thekaekara reflects on how motherhood has changed along with the online communication boom.
Comments on The No-Nonsense Guide to Fair Trade
Leave your comment
Registration is quick and easy!
Register | Login
...And all is quiet.
Subscribe to Comments for this article
Guidelines: Please be respectful of others when posting your reply.