Posts Tagged ‘Economic Justice’

Second Week of Lent and Economic Justice in Bolivia

Thursday, March 4th, 2010

During the Lenten season, Operation Rice Bowl gives us many different opportunities to Pray, Fast, Learn and Give.  This week the program is reflecting on Catholic Relief Services’ work in the South American country of Bolivia.

Recently the Fair Trade team received a progress report from our CRS Bolivia colleagues working on the ASOVITA project, an effort to help small-scale farmers  establish sustainable and fair businesses.  The Fair Trade Fund is supporting an emphasis on fair or “solidarity” trading principles such as sharing “market intelligence”  and building the capacity to create alliances among small business and government.  In Bolivia, 40 percent of the population works in agriculture. We encourage you to place 40 cents a day in your Rice Bowl in solidarity with the Bolivians who earn their living from the land, and in turn, seek to steward it.

This week we also celebrate that Fair Trade colleague Antonia Rodriguez Medrano was recently appointed by  President Evo Morales as the new Minister of Productive Development and Plural Economy in Bolivia.   Antonia, whom I had the pleasure of meeting at a World Fair Trade Organization conference, is the founder of ASARBOLSEM, a grassroots organization that connects groups of handcraft producers and provides marketing services for them on Fair Trade terms.    Under Antonia’s leadership, ASARBOLSEM was named one of the United Nation Development Program’s model social enterprises in Latin America.

Nurturing the leadership of women and social enterprise for all is one of the ways Fair Trade promotes economic justice in Bolivia and worldwide!

Prayer for Dr. King Day

Monday, January 19th, 2009

As we pause today to reflect on the role Fair Trade plays in the march toward global economic justice, the CRS economic justice team thanks our friends at the National Catholic Rural Life Conference for this prayer:

Gracious God, you create us and love us; you make us to live together in a community. We thank you for Martin Luther King, Jr. and all your children who have been filled with your vision for our lives and who have worked to make bring your vision into reality.

Fill us with your vision. Guide us to live by your vision, working to build the beloved community where everyone is welcomed, all are valued, power is shared, privilege is no more, and all your children know wholeness and well-being. 

Amen.

Global Solidarity Resolutions All Year Long

Friday, January 9th, 2009

We’ve finished the first full week of 2009.  How is it going with those resolutions?  Have you shown up regularly at the gym?  Written in your journal daily?  Been nicer to that grumpy neighbor?  Cut back on unnecessary energy usage?

One strategy I’ve heard for keeping on track with your aspirations is to set benchmarks to chart progress.  Catholic Relief Services Fair Trade has developed a checklist tool to help you stay on course for economic justice all year long.  Inspired by the efforts of our friends at Global Exchange and the success of parish-based resolutions from California Fair Trade Ambassador Kevin Olin, we have come up with some suggested resolutions tied to the liturgical calendar. Starting off with a prayer for our brothers and sisters struggling in poverty, and highlighting national events such as Fair Trade month in October, this one-pager can give you ideas for a whole year of Fair Trade. We’ve also added some ideas for service and legislative advocacy. Here’s a PDF of our 2009 Fair Trade Resolutions: 2009-resolutionsfinal

Another tip for sticking with your goals is to enlist the support of others.  This blog can be your spot for asking for resources or celebrating success.  Don’t hesitate to comment and to connect with fellow Fair Traders.  You can start by letting us know what YOUR resolutions are to promote global solidarity!

8th Day of Ambassdors: Mathew of Texas

Thursday, January 1st, 2009

Throughout the year the CRS Economic Justice team tries to share with our colleagues the many ways Fair Trade promotes global solidarity. From Christmas carols on You Tube to Fair Trade chocolate treats at Halloween time, we spread the word throughout our LEED certified building here in Baltimore. We are especially proud, though, when staff members hear about Ambassadors because they take the initiative in building commitment to CRS programs beyond Fair Trade. Thanks to the efforts of Mathew George of Houston, TX the St. Vincent DePaul parish there was the second-highest contributor to Operation Rice Bowl in the diocese last year. Our Food Security colleagues are gearing up for Lent 2009 right now. Please join us!

The Olympics need an authentic dose of respect

Friday, August 22nd, 2008

When I was in Seattle earlier this summer training a group ofCRS Fair Trade Ambassadors, one of the best parts was a talk given by Scott James, founder and CEO of Fair Trade Sports. Scott is known in the Fair Trade world as a entrepreneur of the best sort: super-smart, passionate about justice, full of ideas, and all around nice guy. He spent a couple hours with us CRS Fair Trade folks sharing his approach to and enthusiasm for economic justice and word-of-mouth marketing.

These past few weeks, as I watched some of the Olympics, I wondered what Scott (shown below with yours truly) was thinking about, beyond the extraordinary athleticism on display. Scott was kind enough to submit his observations and perspectives, which do not necessarily represent CRS, but do give us much to think about as the Olympics wind down and the need for international respect continues.

From the keyboard of Scott James:
“This summer has been one of the most memorable in years! The Beijing Olympics have opened up an ancient city that’s been elusive to visitors for thousands of years. A new spirit of hope graces the world right now, opening the doors for newfound respect between nations. The question I ask myself often these days is how can we channel this new global attitude towards improving social and economic conditions everywhere?

Fair Trade establishes economic justice by giving indigenous peoples the ability to become self-sufficient. Self-sufficiency includes more than just survival. Self-sufficiency includes having a living wage that sustains self-reliance and respect, which empowers even the poorest nation. Nations can build, recover and grow with the self- reliance inherent in the Fair Trade movement.

Major athletic sponsors, such as Nike and Adidas, are making huge corporate profits from the Beijing Olympic Games. When you browse their websites, you’ll find jackets, pants and even sports balls related to the Olympics selling for well over $100. Are the prices of their products indicative of production costs? Unfortunately, they are not.

Adidas is the official sponsor of the Beijing Olympics, and Nike is a major contributor of sports equipment and uniforms for the teams. Both companies have less than stellar Fair Trade and employee rights records (try a quick search on their brand names on the Coop America website). Too often, profits are pumped into the pockets of investors and celebrity athletes rather than the economies of the product’s producers. This disrespects the integrity of those who work long hours in unhealthy conditions. Such a lifestyle deprives them of self- sufficiency and is an injustice that destroys entire countries’
economies. But I believe these large companies can change; that change will occur when they are under enough pressure, both external and internal.

External pressure from the market has proven a great force of change in many industries. Fair Trade companies like mine provide actionable education through our blog that Adidas and Nike can use to begin their own certified Fair Trade and eco-certified product lines. We will count it as a victory when one of the Top 5 multinational brands converts their sports ball line to certified Fair Trade like ours. As the public becomes more educated by Fair Trade companies, they are more likely to buy Fair Trade products and pressure larger athletic companies to comply.

Internal pressure within multinational companies like Adidas and Nike can come through inspired employees and corporate managers willing to think holistically and make change towards a truly sustainable (and thus, ethical) supply chain. These folks do exist; I’ve helped train some of them at the sustainable MBA program Bainbridge Graduate Institute.

Global respect can be transferred to corporate respect. The major athletic brands we see behind the Olympics need to understand the crucial link between respect and economic justice. By pumping their profits into respect for the indigenous workers, they will get ten- fold return on their corporate identity. Fair wages and healthy working conditions increase employee productivity and the entire community’s stability. With Fair Trade, it is possible to undo the years of economic injustice by simply giving authentic respect to the producers of our products.”

To respond to these thoughts, please leave a comment below. To read more from Scott, visit his blog: www.fairtradesports.com

Butter the Popcorn for some Justice Flicks

Friday, August 1st, 2008

I am what educators call a “visual learner.” Do you have tips for how to brew a Fair Trade cup of coffee? Then please let me look over your barista shoulder, but don’t hand me an instruction manual. Time to improve my Spanish? Then I invite my bilingual friends to a conversation marked by their patience and my poor conjugation of verbs.

Because I often learn best by seeing, I am a big fan of documentaries, and by extension I’m a fan of California Newsreel, a nonprofit that specializes in producing and distributing social justice films. These folks recently gave me a review copy of A Killer Bargain. Focused on textile production in India the movie demonstrates how “bargain” prices often don’t reflect the actual human and environmental costs associated with their production. From the use of pesticides banned by many western nations to daily exposure to toxic chemicals, the workers profiled in the movie helped me see how manufacturing that is focused on cost savings sometimes exacts a high price on people and the planet.

With economic times tough for U.S. consumers, many of us are having to tighten household budgets. As we stretch our consumer dollars as people of faith, we are called to calculate the costs of “cheap” products. When shopping we consider factors such as the color or size of a product, and let’s also judge whether or not a purchase reflects our faith.

Films from California Newsreel can help us learn and act on the realities of the global economy. Faith groups and educational institutions receive a discount price on ordering titles from California Newsroom. Some of the films, like my favorite Made in LA, offer a facilitator’s guide. So, if you are the kind of person who learns by talking, California Newsreel can help you with justice education for your community too!

Trade AND Aid in Ghana

Tuesday, July 15th, 2008

Back in the 1960s the international development community coined the phrase “Trade not Aid” as an approach to poverty alleviation. The notion being that, in addition to humanitarian assistance and emergency response, countries facing financial hardship are best served by economic opportunities with other countries. In Ghana, Trade Aid Integrated is a non-profit organization that joins both concepts of assistance and opportunity by helping women from 19 different communities near Bolgatonga, a provincial capital, sell their distinctive and brightly-colored bolga baskets, for local and international sale. Some of the weavers are also beneficiaries of CRS-administered education programs that provide food to school children.
Weavers work at Trade Aid
Members of a Frontiers of Justice delegation to Ghana recently visited Trade Aid, and among the visitors was our own Sinead Naughton, who serves as a CRS Fair Trade Ambassador. As someone who has had the privilege of visiting Ghana twice, it was a real treat this morning to see the smiling faces of a weaver and Sinead on the CRS blog! Check out the posting about the FOJ trip to Ghana and Burkina Faso to learn more about how CRS is promoting charity and economic justice in West Africa.

Justice for Farmworkers, in the United States too

Thursday, April 3rd, 2008

As Katy and I hurry to clear off our desks before heading to the Fair Trade Federation conference, I almost forgot this week is National Farmworker Awareness week. Luckily a new report, Children in the Fields: An American Problem, from my colleagues at the Association of Farmworker Opportunity Programs, jogged my memory and motivated me to stop and celebrate with you the lives of farmworkers such as Cesar Chavez and to renew calls for justice in the fields.

Those of us committed to Fair Trade know that coffee farmers in Nicaragua, cocoa farmers in Ghana, really producers anywhere who work to plant, cultivate, and harvest the food that finds its ways to our kitchen tables deserve to be compensated justly for their labor. More and more of us are turning our attention also to efforts to support local agriculture out of concern for our planet and a desire to build right relationships with the families that farm our food. I know a highlight of my weekend is passing through the neighborhood farmers’ market in Dupont Circle, Washington, DC

Still, much of the produce in this country is harvested by migrant farmworkers, who don’t necessarily participate in farmers’ markets because they don’t own the land they work. Instead they move from place to place following the seasons and paths trod by generations of pickers before them. In fact, when we think “farmworker,” we may conjure an image of the renowned Cesar Chavez, who led famous grape boycotts using nonviolent means. Although much has been accomplished by social action, especially the recent campaigns for tomato pickers by the Coalition of Immokalee Workers, injustice is still present.

The recent report by AFOP demonstrates that hundreds of thousands of children work as hired labor in America’s fields and orchards. These kids are among the least protected of working youth in the United States due to the skewed “protections” of the Fair Labor Standards Act. While—according to Federal standards—children 14 and 15 years of age can’t work in fast-food restaurants more than three hours a day when school is in session, those children are technically allowed to pick the tomatoes and onions to put on your burger or taco for as many hours as they can fit into a day. Children can rise before dawn to plant, weed and chop. Later, when school is out, they can go outside to work well into the night. But, by law, children hired to work in air-conditioned stores and restaurants are not allowed to work after 7:00 p.m. during the school year. These scenarios assume that the children are in school, but AFOP cites reports from the Child Labor Coalition that “farmworker children have lower school enrollment rates than any other group in the United States.”

AFOP’s report spells out some recommendations for new legislation, enforcement and research to help politicians and businesses reform our agricultural system. To help us learn about the complexity of issues from a faith framework, the National Farm Worker Ministry has made many resources available for education and reflection. I also count on the work of Student Action with Farmworkers based out of Duke University and the Farmworker Justice Fund, which has consistently advocated for farmworkers inside the beltway for many years. Finally, check out the National Catholic Rural Life Conference, which applies the teachings of Jesus Christ for the betterment of rural America and care of God’s creation.

And if you have reflections about bringing the principles of Fair Trade to the farms of the United States, comment here!