Fair Trade Flowers: Global Certification, Environmental Sustainability, and Labor Standards

Title: Fair Trade Flowers: Global Certification, Environmental Sustainability, and Labor Standards
Summary:

This article analyzes the organization of the fair trade flower industry, integration of Ecuadorian enterprises into these networks, and power of certification to address key environmental and social concerns on participating estates. Pursuing a social regulatory approach, I locate fair trade within the field of new institutions that establish and enforce production criteria in international markets. My research finds that while firm owners and managers support fair trade’s environmental and social goals, these commitments are delimited by mainstream market expectations related to production efficiency and product quality. In environmental arenas, certification helps ensure that conditions exceed legal mandates and industry norms. In social arenas, certification helps ensure that labor standards exceed legal and industry expectations and funds important programs benefiting workers and their families. Where unions are absent, fair trade’s greatest impact may be in the establishment of workers’ committees that can build collective capacity. Although these new labor organizations face numerous challenges, they may strengthen the social regulation of global flower networks, making firms accountable to their workers as well as to nongovernmental organizations, retailers, and consumers.

TO CITE THIS ARTICLE:

Laura Raynolds 2012 Fair Trade Flowers: Global Certification, Environmental Sustainability, and Labor Standards Rural Sociology 77 (4) 493-519

Language: English
Type: Journal
Academic Publication: yes
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