In the News

Reverse trick-or-treat focuses on fair-trade candy

Edmonton Journal
10/31/2008

By Hanneke Brooymans

Some children will be participating in a reverse trick-or-treat campaign to make people aware of the ongoing child labour and environmental damage involved in the chocolate industry.

These children will hand out fair-trade certified chocolates made from cocoa that was purchased at a fair price -- a price that allows farmers to make a decent living, as well as premiums to invest in health care, safe water, education and business infrastructure, says TransFair Canada, a non-profit organization that promotes fair-trade products... 

Stop Impunity in Guatemala: Trade Union Appeal to the European Union

ITUC OnLine
10/31/2008

Brussels, 31 October 2008 (ITUC OnLine): A delegation of Guatemalan

trade union representatives, including the General Secretaries of the

ITUC-affiliated CGTG and CUSG, is to take part in a mission organised by the International Trade Union Confederation. The mission, which will run from Monday 3 to Thursday 20 November and will visit various European member states, is a follow-up to the international trade union

conference held in Guatemala in January on "The Role of Trade Union

Organisations in the Fight against Impunity".

Reverse trick-or-treating

Wednesday Journal
10/31/2008

By Marty Stempniak

A group of Oak Park and River Forest children is going door-to-door today practicing reverse trick-or-treating: They're handing out fair trade chocolates to those who answer the door. The reversal is a way of giving back to the community while raising awareness of poverty and unfair labor practices in cocoa-growing countries.

The idea for the reversal started last year when Oak Park mom Jane Zawadowski received an e-mail from Global Exchange, a nonprofit that started giving out the chocolates...

Chesapeake woman spreads fair trade candy on Halloween

The Virginian-Pilot
10/31/2008

By Steven G. Vegh

As her boys stroll door-to-door hollering "trick or treat" this Halloween, Katherine Johnke will be right behind them with another message: "Fair trade chocolate!"

Johnke, 38, of Chesapeake, will give homeowners chocolates guaranteed not to be produced with child labor or unfair pricing for farmers... 

Participating congregants plan to give the 19-cent chocolates to trick-or-treaters, or have their own children give the candy to homeowners. Each treat includes a card describing the Fair Trade philosophy and cocoa industry practices...

Trick and Trade

CBS 3 Springfield
10/31/2008

By Justine Judge

A group of Hadley teens are putting a new spin on Trick or Treating. They're trying to to change the kind of chocolate people buy to help kids half a world away. Instead of Trick or Treat it will be Trick and Trade.

Jaimon Olmstead and his 8th grade class at Hartsfrook School in Hadley are joining up with thousands of trick or treater's across the US and Canada.

They're hoping to shed light on big chocolate corporations who use child labor off the Ivory Coast of Africa where 40 percent of the world's cocoa is produced... 

Mankato 'Reverse Trick-or-Treaters' Give Fair Trade Chocolate

Fox 9 News (Twin Cities)
10/31/2008

Excerpt from article: 

Trick-or-treaters in Mankato are spreading awareness about Fair Trade chocolate and problems with the global cocoa trade this Halloween... 

The campaign hopes to raise awareness of child labor, poverty and other issues surrounding the global cocoa industry, and let people know about Fair Trade chocolate alternatives... 

Candy awareness in Mankato

Mankato Free Press
10/30/2008

By Brian Ojanpa

...The reverse trick-or-treating is done by children kindergarten age and up, and Christ the King Lutheran youth minister Steve Kidder keeps the Fair Trade concept simple for participating grade-schoolers.

The global cocoa industry, as with coffee and other commodities, is beset with unfair labor practices, particularly in Africa, where child labor abuses exist.

Fair Trade Trick-or-Treat

Policy Innovations
10/30/2008

By Louisa Chan

...In partnership with ten other nonprofit organizations and three fair trade chocolate companies, Global Exchange, a San Francisco–based human rights organization, has distributed reverse trick-or-treat kits across the United States and Canada. In addition to getting a little chocolate of their own, participating children will hand out samples of fair trade chocolate and a card describing the poverty, child labor, and environmental problems associated with the mainstream chocolate industry.

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