This book unfolds rather like a good novel; it is compelling and convincing. The authors approach their topic with a great deal of background and superb organizational abilities. As the premise unwinds, readers are provided with excellent explanation and justification, as well as real-life accounts of people and their experiences. As a side benefit, the book also yields an admirable example of well-done qualitative case studies that are triangulated effectively with survey methods. –Sara U. Douglas, University of Illinois
Social Responsibility in the Global Market illuminates an alternative way of conducting business that bridges the consumer′s social concerns and the producer′s financial concern through a compatible, nonexploitive, and humanizing system of fair trade. In-depth case studies introduce past successes and failures for seven Alternative Trading Organizations (ATOs) as they foster artisan empowerment, cultural integrity, and business sustainability. An integrative model synthesizes business conditions, tasks, and skills imperative for effective functioning of a fair trade system in an increasingly competitive global market. Mary Ann Littrell and Marsha Ann Dickson′s treatment of ATOs provides useful insights for academics in marketing, international development, entrepreneurship, and anthropology. In addition, this book offers practical finance for practitioners in international development, socially responsible businesses, and consumers concerned about impacts of their marketplace decisions.
Tabella dei contenuti
PART ONE: INTRODUCTION TO FAIR TRADE IN THE GLOBAL MARKET
Philosophy, Practices and Organizational Culture
Scholarly Perspectives for Analysis of Fair Trade
PART TWO: INCOME, JUSTICE AND EMPOWERMENT THROUGH FAIR TRADE
Ten Thousand Villages
A Mission-Driven Journey
SERRV
Alternative Distribution, Philosophical Considerations and Hard Business Decisions
Pueblo to People
Balancing Politics and Business
Marketplace
Handwork of India ′Soaring with Strong Wings′
Focused Players with Pragmatic Approaches
PART THREE: DIVERSE STAKEHOLDERS IN THE SYSTEM OF FAIR TRADE
Artisan Producer Groups
′Our Hands Are Our Future′
ATO Consumers
Creative, Practical and Concerned
Challenges in Product Development
PART FOUR: CHALLENGES AND OPPORTUNITIES FOR MAXIMIZING SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY THROUGH FAIR TRADE
Strategic Appropriateness for the Global Market
The Future for Alternative Trade Organizations
Circa l’autore
Department of Apparel, Educational Studies, and Hospitality Management at Iowa State University in Ames. Her Ph D is from Purdue University.