Fair Trade and justice: a comment on Walton and Deneulin
Language
EN
Article de revue
This item was published in
Third World Quarterly. 2015, vol. 36, n° 8, p. 1421-1436
English Abstract
In this article we first point out that the different conceptualisations of Fair Trade, which are sometimes analytically contradictory, actually form a coordinated set. Understanding the Fair Trade project is impossible ...Read more >
In this article we first point out that the different conceptualisations of Fair Trade, which are sometimes analytically contradictory, actually form a coordinated set. Understanding the Fair Trade project is impossible without taking these interlinked conceptualisations into consideration. Second, this set basically forms a mechanism of structural, institutional and moral reforms that guide actions. In this way Fair Trade sets out to produce less injustice than is usually the case with the structures and institutions that govern conventional trade. Nevertheless, it does not try to define what a just society is or even to perfectly define ‘fair trade’. This implies the adoption of a comparative justice angle. It is precisely by linking comparative individual situations with the structures that produce these situations that relative justice can find its strength and purpose.Read less <
English Keywords
sustainability
international trade
poverty
corporate social responsibility and fair trade
corporate strategy
justice
livelihoods and sustainability
poverty and inequality
social justice
social movement