| Editor's
Note: In a recent letter to their members (excerpted
below), Global Exchange issued a challenge to purchase
only fair trade goods this holiday season and beyond.
Check out the following list of resources and for all your
personal and gift-giving needs.
With
the holidays approaching, many of us will be buying gifts
for friends and loved ones. As people who are concerned
about people all over the world, we may find ourselves
wondering how to make sure we spend our dollars ethically,
and ensure that the gifts we give benefit those who made
them as well as those who receive them. Thankfully, lots
of great purchasing alternatives exist, such as Fair Trade
coffee and chocolate, and fairly traded goods from around
the world.
This
holiday season, Global Exchange is issuing the Fair
Trade Challenge – buy ALL of your holiday gifts
from Fair Trade sources! Read on to find out why Fair
Trade is so important, where to find fair trade goods, and
how to get involved in Fair Trade action.
WHY
BUY Fair Trade Certified and fairly traded?
As
Café Campesino’s regular customers are no doubt well
aware, millions of coffee farmers are facing severe
poverty, hunger, and loss of their farms as a result of a
price crash in the global coffee market. Due to
insufficient cocoa prices, many cocoa farmers have found
it necessary to have their own children work instead of
going to school and some have even resorted to using child
slaves. Producers of tea and other commodities face
similar hardships, unable to make ends meet with the
income received through sales in the "free"
market. As corporations expand their operations across
borders, we have seen a race to the bottom for labor and
wage guidelines. Workers in developing nations are facing
rapidly worsening poverty while large transnational
corporations pull in increased profits at their expense.
Solutions to these problems are available. Fair Trade
products such as coffee, chocolate, cocoa, and tea
guarantee producers a minimum price per pound and access
to credit, support sustainable production, and prohibit
abusive child labor and forced labor. Fair Trade products
offer farmers economic security and hope for the future.
It is also becoming easier to find clothing, crafts, and
other goods derived through fair labor and wage
conditions. Fair trade stores and on-line retailers are
growing in number each year, while union-made clothing is
also becoming more widely available. This holiday season,
and thereafter, give fair trade and show how much you care
for our global community!
WHERE
TO BUY Fair Trade Certified and fairly traded Products
Fair
Trade coffee and tea
—
Buy
it from Café Campesino! http://www.cafecampesino.com/shop
Fair Trade chocolate and cocoa
— Find lists at:
Global
Exchange http://store.globalexchange.org/chocolate.html
TransFairUSA
https://www.transfairusa.org/content/
products/prd_cocoa.jsp
Fairly traded crafts, household
goods, clothing and other goods —
Fair
Trade Federation
www.fairtradefederation.org
SERRV
www.serrv.org
(See Fellow Fair Traders in
this issue)
Co-op
America
www.coopamerica.org
Fair
Trade Resource Network
www.fairtraderesource.org
10,000 Villages
www.tenthousandvillages.com
No
Sweat "Union Mall": One-stop shopping for
union-made goods in the USA
www.NoSweatShop.com
UNION
MADE holiday gifts
The
Union label is the best guarantee of fair labor and wage
standards in the USA. And yes, in this Wal-Mart world,
it's still possible to find U.S. union made clothing.
You'll find union made products on the following online
stores:
No
Sweat "Union Mall" and No Sweat Apparel
www.nosweatapparel.com
No Sweat's new "Union Mall" offers one-stop
on-line shopping for clothing (t-shirts, fashion athletic
wear, sweats, hoodies, denim jackets, scarves, hats, and
more) and other items such as books from a variety of
unionized shops and companies.
SweatX
http://sweatx.net/
L.A.s first union cut and sew shop. Wholesale T-shirts and
retail items.
Diamond
Cut Jeans
http://www.diamondcutjeans.com
"The last union made jeans in America, all cotton,
all union."
Union
Threads
http://www.unionthreads.com
Union made decorated work wear.
BOOKS
& RESOURCES: Give the gift of awareness and activism
on Fair Trade & Globalization
Books/Videos
Available from Café Campesino
All
of the following are available at www.cafecampesino.com/shop
The
Coffee Book: Anatomy of an Industry From Crop to the Last
Drop
— Gregory Dicum & Nina Luttinger. 2000 (196 p). —
This engaging, informative book is full of facts, figures,
cartoons, and commentary, covering coffee from its first
use in Ethiopia in the 6th century to the rise of
Starbucks and other specialty retailers in the 1990s. It
tells how international trade and speculation that can
make or break entire national economies, considers the
exploitation tied to mass cultivation, and explores the
growing Fair Trade movement.
A
Cafecito Story
— Story by Julia Alvarez, Illustrations by Belkis RamĚrez.
2001 (58 p). Fictional/semi-autobiographical story by
famed writer Julia Alvarez shows how Fair Trade impacts
coffee farmers and coffee drinkers. This book tells the
complex tale of a social beverage that bridges nations and
unites people in trade, words, birds, and love.
Santiago's
Story
— TransFair USA. 1999 (16 min video). Accompanying
discussion guide by Global Exchange. A rich, uplifting
documentary about Fair Trade and the dramatic changes it
has brought to the lives of a Nicaraguan coffee farmer and
his family. It is the story of over 500,000 small farmers
around the world who have turned to Fair Trade for a
decent wage. A powerful tool for education, this film
shows the tremendous impact we can have in the lives of
people like Santiago when we choose to buy Fair Trade
coffee.
Global
Exchange K-12 Fair Trade Chocolate education materials
— Global Exchange has coloring/activity books for grades
K-2, 3-6, and a JrHigh/High School Education & Action
Guide. These materials teach kids about child labor and
exploitation in the cocoa industry and help them take
positive action in support of Fair Trade. These materials
can be sent via mail for a suggested donation of $5 each,
or downloaded free
at www.globalexchange.org/cocoa.
Books/Videos Available from Global Exchange
All of the following available at www.globalexchange.org/store
About
Cocoa/chocolate, coffee and Fair Trade
The
Conscious Consumer: Promoting Economic Justice Through
Fair Trade
— Fair Trade Resource Network. 2000. A 22-page overview
of the North American Fair Trade movement.
NEW!!
Harvest of Hope: Life in the Kuapa Kokoo Cocoa Cooperative
in Ghana
by Phil Grout. 2003. With beautiful color photos spread
throughout the story, this book gives a glimpse of the
daily life of farming and trading cocoa in West Africa.
Coffee
With Pleasure: Just Java and World Trade
by Laure Waridel, Foreword by Maude Barlow. 2001 (173 p).
Using coffee as an example, this book shows how our
current trading system perpetuates poverty and injustice,
and explains how the Fair Trade system breaks the cycle of
exploitation and environmental destruction.
The
Strength of the Indigenous People of Mut Vitz: Producing
Fair Trade Organic Coffee in the Highlands of Chiapas
— Produced by The Mut Vitz Coffee Cooperative with the
Chiapas Media Project. 2000 (Tzotzil and Spanish, with
English subtitles, 27min video). This documentary looks
the organic coffee farmers of the Mut Vitz Coffee
Collective in Chiapas, Mexico. Over a year in the making
(by two members of the collective), this film traces the
entire Fair Trade/Organic coffee production process: from
seedling to transplant, from cultivation to the roasted
bean. The film shows the challenges the collective faces
in processing their coffee for market and their
achievements through Fair Trade.
About
Fair Trade Crafts
Artisans
and Cooperatives: Developing Alternative Trade for the
Global Economy
— Eds. Kimberly M. Grimes & B. Lynne Milgram. 2000
(208 p). Bringing together case studies from the Americas
and Asia, this collection addresses the interplay between
craft production and the global market. It contributes to
current debates on economic inequality by offering
practical examples of relevant political, economic, and
cultural issues.
About
Fair Trade and the Global Economy
No
Nonsense Guide to Fair Trade
— Ed. David Ransom. 2001 (144 p). Fair Trade primer that
offers chapters on NAFTA, Fair Trade coffee, chocolate,
and bananas, blue jeans, where to buy Fair Trade goods,
and more.
The
No Nonsense Guide to Globalization
— 2001 (144 p). This book traces the journey towards a
'borderless' world and shows how the promise of
globalization is seductive, powerful - and ultimately
hollow.
Chapters
include a history of globalization, the Bretton Woods
Trio, debt and structural adjustment, corporations, global
economics, poverty, environment, the market, and ideas for
redesigning the global economy.
Views
from the South: The Effects of Globalization and the WTO
on Third World Countries
— Martin Khor, Vandana Shiva, Walden Bello, Oronto
Douglas, Sara Larrain, & Anuradha Mittal, forward by
Jerry Mander, ed. Sarah Anderson. 1999 (100 p). A
comprehensive perspective on the WTO from some of the
leading voices from the South. The authors debunk the idea
that global instruments benefit the Third World or the
poor, and show how the South in fact bears extra burdens
from the rules of trade.
On
Child Labor
We
Need to Go to School: Voices of the Rugmark Children
— Complied by Tanya Roberts-Davis. In their own words
and drawings, Nepalese children talk about their early
years in poverty-stricken villages, their work as virtual
slaves in carpet factories in Kathmandu, and how they felt
when they were given a chance to attend school and pursue
their dreams for the future.
On
Activism
Take
It Personally: How to Make Conscious Choices to Change the
World — Anita
Roddick. 2001 (256 p). From the protests in Seattle to the
perseverance of people like Julia Butterfly Hill and
Vandana Shiva, we're seeing a growing resistance to
globalization and its negative effects. Anita Roddick
(founder of The Body Shop) presents here a vibrant
collection of photographs, essays, montages, and quoted on
the driving issues behind globalization from impassioned
writers and activist organizations. This is the definitive
handbook for anyone who wants to learn about the issues
and make informed choices.
Global
Uprising: Confronting the Tyrannies of the 21st Century
— Stories from a New Generation of Activists
— Neva Welton and Linda Wolf. 2001 (273 p). In a world
of mounting turmoil and violence, understanding the
sources of increasing discontent at a global level is a
great need. Global Uprising gives voice to more than 60
activists who are all standing up against this violence,
from groups such as Art & Revolution, Bat Shalom,
Circle of Life Foundation, Earth Rights International,
Global Exchange, Global Youth Connect, Heads up Afrique,
JustAct, Ruckus Society, Third Eye Movement, United
Students Against Sweatshops, Youth for Environmental
Sanity, and more.
FIND
OUT MORE about Fair Trade Campaigns
Global
Exchange: Coffee, Chocolate/cocoa, FTAA/WTO and more
www.globalexchange.org/cocoa
www.globalexchange.org/coffee
Fair
Trade Resource Network
www.fairtraderesource.org
Oxfam
America
www.oxfamamerica.org
(Back
to Headlines)
|