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  1. Gender equity, labor rights, and women’s empowerment: lessons from Fairtrade certification in Ecuador flower plantations.Laura T. Raynolds - 2021 - Agriculture and Human Values 38 (3):657-675.
    Certification programs seek to promote decent work in global agriculture, yet little is known about their gender standards and implications for female workers, who are often the most disadvantaged. This study outlines the gender standard domains of major agricultural certifications, showing how some programs (Fair Trade USA, Rainforest) prioritize addressing gender equality in employment and others (Fairtrade International, UTZ) incorporate wider gender rights. To illuminate the implications of gender standards in practice, I analyze Fairtrade certification and worker experience on certified (...)
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  • The triple burden: the impact of time poverty on women’s participation in coffee producer organizational governance in Mexico.Sarah Lyon, Tad Mutersbaugh & Holly Worthen - 2017 - Agriculture and Human Values 34 (2):317-331.
    In the mid-1990s, fairtrade-organic registration data showed that only 9 % of Oaxaca, Mexico’s organic coffee ‘farm operators’ were women; by 2013 the female farmer rate had increased to 42 %. Our research investigates the impact of this significant increase in women’s coffee association participation among 210 members of two coffee producer associations in Oaxaca, Mexico. We find that female coffee organization members report high levels of household decision-making power and they are more likely than their male counterparts to report (...)
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  • The sustainability promise of alternative food networks: an examination through “alternative” characteristics.Sini Forssell & Leena Lankoski - 2015 - Agriculture and Human Values 32 (1):63-75.
    Concerns about the unsustainability of the conventional food system have brought attention to so called alternative food networks, which are widely thought to be more sustainable. However, claims made about AFNs’ sustainability have been subject to a range of criticisms. Some of them present counterevidence, while others have pointed to problematic underlying features in the academic literature and popular discourse that may hamper our understanding of AFNs’ sustainability. Considering these criticisms, together with the fact that the literature often addresses a (...)
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  • Changing women’s lives? Empowerment and aspirations of fair trade workers in South India.Priya Ange, Jérôme Ballet, Aurélie Carimentrand & Kamala Marius - 2019 - Journal of Global Ethics 15 (1):32-44.
    Fair trade is a new form of commercial partnership whereby actors in the North engage with actors in the South on a number of conditions, including setting a minimum price, a development bonus, and so on. But above all, fair trade organizations in the South are implementing mechanisms that more or less facilitate the empowerment of their members. This article analyzes the empowerment effects of two fair trade organizations in South India. It shows that while positive effects can be seen, (...)
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