The
Ethical Trading Initiative (ETI) is a leading alliance of companies,
trade unions and NGOs that promotes respect for workers' rights
around the globe. Our vision is a world where all workers are
free from exploitation and discrimination, and enjoy conditions
of freedom, security and equity.
What is
ethical trade?
Ethical
trade means that retailers, brands and their suppliers take
responsibility for improving the working conditions of the people
who make the products they sell. Most of these workers are employed
by supplier companies around the world, many of them based in
poor countries where laws designed to protect workers' rights
are inadequate or not enforced.
Companies
with a commitment to ethical trade adopt a code of labour practice
that they expect all their suppliers to work towards. Such codes
address issues like wages, hours of work, health and safety
and the right to join free trade unions.
Why is ETI
needed?
'Doing'
ethical trade is much harder than it sounds. Modern supply chains
are vast, complex and span the globe. Labour issues are themselves
challenging. For example, what exactly is ‘a living wage'? What
should a company do if it finds children working in a supplier's
worksite? Evicting children from the workplace can, paradoxically,
make their lives worse.
ETI brings
corporate, trade union and voluntary sector members together
in a unique alliance that enables us to collectively tackle
many thorny issues that cannot be addressed by individual companies
working alone.
Ethical
Trade official website
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