for spiders only OneWorld U.S. Home > In Depth > Perspectives > Issue 6: Fair Trade skip to main content
OneWorld_Home Logo_ Go to OneWorld U.S. homepage
Search for
TODAY'S NEWS IN DEPTH PARTNERS GET INVOLVED OUR NETWORK
Mon., May. 12, 2008

Email to a friend    Subscribe    Feedback    Donate    About us    Contact   

Fair Trade & Our Buying Choices

© Fairtrade Foundation
Issue 6, December 2005 - Global trade takes center stage this month as financial leaders will make decisions that impact us all at the Word Trade Organization’s highest-level meeting in Hong Kong. The developing world will argue that today’s “free” trade system disadvantages small farmers struggling to survive. In addition to attempts to reform this system, a global pocketbook revolution has been underway for years to make trade fair. Find out how your buying choices can make a difference this holiday season.

» Editor’s Letter » Subscribe »Download/Print [.pdf; 890 K]
A woman picks cotton in the Fana region of Mali.
The words “free trade” imply a system unencumbered by government influence, but the reality is that countries with the means have instituted policies to protect their own businesses and farmers—often at the expense of others around the world.
Image: A woman picks cotton in the Fana region of Mali.
Tea pickers at the Makaïbari cooperative in India.
A decades-old movement to support the work of impoverished farmers and artisans around the world has developed into a billion dollar industry benefiting nearly a million workers—and their families.
Image: Tea pickers at the Makaïbari cooperative in India. © Kaare Viemose
Shoveling Cocoa in the Dominican Republic
The debates over the fair trade certification process and the extent to which large corporations should be welcomed into the business highlight a movement at a crossroads.
Image: Shoveling Cocoa in the Dominican Republic © Fairtrade Foundation
A study abroad trip to Thailand inspired Ellen Roggemann and friends to start a non-profit that facilitates global grassroots exchanges, like the one that brought three Thai farmers to San Francisco to see how their fair trade rice is sold in the U.S.
The upcoming WTO meeting in Hong Kong will be crucial in determining whether the benefits of trade will shift towards developing countries. In the meantime, buying fair trade coffee can help ... one cup at a time.
Ultimately, fair trade is a moral issue—and one that people of faith are taking more and more seriously.
Has fair trade really improved the lives of indigenous producers? Cultural Survival spent several weeks visiting and interviewing fair trade producers as well as importers, labeling organizations, and businesses to find out.
Much of the chocolate found on supermarket shelves continues to be produced under appalling conditions—despite years of public outrage and consumer demand for change. But smaller chocolate companies are showing that there is another way.

Which country does the most fair trade business? How much does the average cocoa farm worker earn? Test your knowledge!
 Take the quiz
 Answers
GET INVOLVED
There's no time like the present — especially if the present is the holiday season — to do your part to make trade fair.
 Call for trade justice
 Buy fair trade products
 Check out the holiday gift guide featuring OneWorld partners
 
Add your thoughts on anything you have (or haven't) read here, and find out what others have to say...
ADDITIONAL RESOURCES
The ABCs of fair trade, trade and the environment, and much more. Find resources on:
 Global Trade
 The Fair Trade Movement
LATEST UPDATES
Stay updated with the latest news and views from around the world. Bookmark OneWorld's Full Coverage on:
 Trade
 Development
 Agriculture

Or browse OneWorld's library of articles by topic, country, or region.
FREE! Latest Global News Right to Your Inbox!

 Daily Headlines - html
 Daily Headlines - text
 Daily Headlines - RSS
 Weekly Digest - text
 Perspectives, OneWorld's "treeless" magazine


 
OneWorld thematic channels and collaborative projects include:
AIDS channel digital opportunity channel open knowledge network support centre tiki the Penguin, Kids Channel
 
Feedback    Contact    About us