Fair Trade: Dynamic and Dilemmas of a Market Oriented Global Social Movement |
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Authors: | John Wilkinson |
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Institution: | (1) Graduate Centre: Development, Agriculture and Society, Rural Federal University, Rio de Janeiro, Avenida Presidente Vargas 417/8, Centro, 20071-003 Rio de Janeiro, Brazil |
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Abstract: | Fair Trade is analysed as a new economic social movement to the extent that it is based on new forms of collective action
and directs its demands primarily to the market rather than to the State. In addition, it is intrinsically a global movement
harnessing development goals to new market relations. It differs, however, from similar movements (organics, animal welfare)
to the extent that it focuses primarily on traditional issues of redistributive justice rather than a new generation of rights
and duties. Fair Trade is understood as having three components: (i) the organization of alternative trading networks; (ii)
the marketing of Fair Trade labelled products through licensed conventional traders and retailers; and (iii) the campaign-based
promotion of Fair Trade to change both purchasing practices and the rules of conventional trade. As a market oriented movement,
Fair Trade relies crucially on the emergence of a new politicization of consumer activity comprising not only “consumer-activists”
but also the State as consumer and a new layer of political consumers sensitive to issues of social justice in their daily
purchasing practices.
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Keywords: | Fair Trade New economic social movement Consumer-oriented social movement Social justice through markets Southern Fair Trade |
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