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  2. Fair trade certification - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fair_trade_certification

    Fair trade is a strategy for poverty alleviation and sustainable development. It aims to create greater equity in the international trading system. It creates social and economic opportunities through trading partnerships with marginalised farmers and craftspeople in developing countries so that more customers are accessible to their products ...

  3. International Fairtrade Certification Mark - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_Fairtrade...

    The fair-trade system is inefficient at transferring coffee consumers’ goodwill to producers. Direct trade is probably more efficient and sustainable than fair trade. Artificially stimulating more coffee production keeps coffee growers poor, because overproduction makes the prices fall on the world markets.

  4. Fair trade - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fair_trade

    Fair trade products meet standards like these. Despite positive attitudes toward ethical products such as fair trade commodities, consumers often are not willing to pay higher prices for fair trade coffee. The attitude-behavior gap can help explain why ethical and fair trade products take up less than 1% of the market.

  5. Fair trade debate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fair_trade_debate

    An investigation into the limits of Fair Trade as a development tool and the risk of clean-washing, HEI Working Papers, vol. 6, Geneva: Economics Section, Graduate Institute of International Studies, October. Mohan, S. (2010), Fair Trade Without the Froth – a dispassionate economic analysis of 'Fair Trade', London: Institute of Economic Affairs.

  6. Fairtrade International - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fairtrade_International

    Fairtrade International was established in 1997. It set private standards relating to labour, cooperative organisation, and the governance of the Fairtrade benefits. The organisation was divided in January 2004 into two independent organisations: [5]

  7. World Fair Trade Organization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/World_Fair_Trade_Organization

    The Fair Trade Organization Mark (WFTO Logo) shows that an organization follows the WFTO's 10 Principles of Fair Trade, covering working conditions, transparency, wages, the environment, gender equity and more. The WFTO logo is not a product mark - it is used to brand organisations that are committed to 100% Fair Trade. It sets them apart from ...

  8. Ethical trade - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ethical_trade

    Ethical Trading Initiative (ETI) [4] is a UK-based organisation that reaches out to 9.8 million workers per year. [5] Since their inception in 1998, they have supported ethical trade in global supply chains by introducing legal protection for 600,000 migrant workers in the UK, aided movements for the increase of real wages in parts of Bangladesh, and contributed to more than 133,000 ...

  9. The Fairtrade Foundation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Fairtrade_Foundation

    The Fairtrade Foundation is a charity based in the United Kingdom that aims to help disadvantaged producers in developing countries by tackling injustice in conventional trade, in particular by promoting and licensing the Fairtrade Mark, a guarantee that products retailed in the UK have been produced in accordance with internationally agreed Fairtrade standards.