CHOCOLATE AND SLAVERY

About of CHOCOLATE AND SLAVERY









NPR : Disconnecting Chocolate from Slavery

  • | | | | | | Disconnecting Chocolate from Slavery , February 14, 2005 · This Valentine's Day, Sen.



    Global Exchange : Harkin-Engel Protocol on Chocolate and Child Slavery Expires on July 1
  • Press Room > > Harkin-Engel Protocol on Chocolate and Child Slavery ...



    AlterNet: Slavery Free Chocolate?
  • . Powers John Tirman Susie Bright Paul Rockwell Paul Rathgeb Terrence McNally Slavery Free Chocolate? By , .
  • . With Valentine's Day coming up, the chocolate industry has agreed to fight child slavery on African cocoa farms.
  • . government and several nonprofit groups to combat child slavery.
  • . He posted their responses, and his list of best chocolate companies at Here's a short (incomplete) list of companies known to sell slavery-free chocolate and cocoa products: Clif Bar Cloud Nine Dagoba Organic Chocolate Denman Island Chocolate Gardners Candies Green and Black's Kailua Candy Company Koppers Chocolate L.A.
  • . (Source: Food Revolution, by John Robbins) The problem of child slavery and indentured servitude in the coffee and cocoa industries in Ivory Coast, where half of the world's cocoa is grown on about 600, 000 plantations, is nothing new.
  • . Not only does the plan lay out monitoring plans, it would also establish of a foundation dedicated to finding new ways to combat child slavery, including public programs that would give positive alternatives to kids who have to work to survive.



    Petition Spot - Chocolate Worker Slavery: Blood Tainted Chocolates
  • Enter your Keyword Username Password Chocolate Worker Slavery: Blood Tainted Chocolates Created by on March 11th, 2006 at 9:10 am AST While slavery in Sudan, Africa, has received much attention, the slavery of children in western Africa has not been so publicized.
  • . Of course the government of Ivory Coast should be enforcing its anti-slavery laws but since it is not doing so, global public pressure must be applied.
  • . They need to know whether there is slavery in the chocolate.
  • . This is not an intervention into the market, because the prime intervention is the slavery.
  • . When consumers buy slave-produced products, they contribute to the slavery.
  • . Now the chocolate-producing companies acknowledge the slavery.
  • . Thanks to the Knight Ridder investigations, their reports of the slavery are already creating a response.
  • . We can end the chocolate worker slavery.

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    Photo by www.chicagodefender.com


    Chocolate and Child Slavery: Unfulfilled Promises of the Cocoa Industry
  • Chocolate and Child Slavery: Unfulfilled Promises of the Cocoa Industry International Labor Rights Fund June 30, 2004 It is estimated that America spends $13 billion a year on chocolate.
  • . Media reports have unveiled stories about boys tricked or sold into slavery, some as young as nine years old, to work on cocoa plantations in Cote d'Ivoire.


    Is There Slavery In Your Chocolate?
  • | Programs | News | Links | Openings | Contact Is There Slavery In Your Chocolate? by John Robbins Chocolate.
  • . Slavery lurking behind the sweetness Most of us, though, aren’t all that concerned with the history or chemistry of chocolate.
  • . In riveting detail, the series profiled young boys who were tricked into slavery, or sold as slaves, to Ivory Coast cocoa farmers.
  • . “It isn’t the slavery we are all familiar with and which most of us imagine was abolished decades ago, ” says Brian Woods.
  • . There wasn’t an inch of his body which wasn’t scarred.” Slavery past and present The ownership of one human being by another is illegal in Ivory Coast, as it is in every other country in the world today.
  • . But that doesn’t mean slavery has ceased to exist.
  • . Kevin Bales is author of “Disposable People: New Slavery in the Global Economy” and director of Free The Slaves, an American branch of Anti-Slavery International.
  • . He points out that one of the economic drawbacks of the old slavery was the cost of maintaining slaves who were too young or too old to work.


    Stop Chocolate Slavery
  • Introduction Welcome to StopChocolateSlavery.
  • . This website is dedicated to raising awareness about the slavery and other labor abuses that taint the vast majority of chocolate products, and to encouraging and facilitating actions aimed at ending those abuses.
  • . It is also dedicated to the children who are victims of chocolate slavery and exploitation – we hope that it can contribute in some small way to making their lives better.
  • . If you’re like we were only weeks ago, you might be scratching your head at the notion of any link between slavery and chocolate.
  • . As you will learn, however, the chocolate industry in general has done little to eliminate the slavery in its supply chain, and, indeed, has played a central role in creating and perpetuating it.
  • . In the third section, we’ve included information about the small number of that aren’t tainted with slavery or other abuses, so that you can “vote” for the chocolate you want with your dollars.
  • . Encourage the small, but burgeoning, market in chocolate that’s exploitation-free, while hitting the slavery-exploiting companies where it hurts – in their pocketbooks.


    CorpWatch : AFRICA: The Dark Side of Chocolate
  • . Slavery drags on and we are paying the slaveholder's wages.
  • . Although these companies have publicly condemned and expressed outrage at the use of child slavery, they admit their ongoing purchase of Ivory Coast cocoa.
  • . The Ivory Coast does not currently produce any organic cocoa, so organic chocolates are unlikely to be tainted by slavery.
  • . A solution to the problem of child labor and slavery in cocoa production is on the rise; fair trade chocolate ensures that farmers receive a fair price for their product and that their labor force is not comprised of children or slaves.
  • . As consumers, our purchasing power can push major corporations to abolish child slavery; we can change the lives of children in West Africa beginning with something as simple as the type of chocolate we buy.
  • . In addition, schools, churches and individuals will be calling and writing in to Nestle to demand a commitment to fair trade and an end to child slavery.

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    Photo by news.bbc.co.uk


    Do slaves produce your favorite chocolate?
  • ANTI-SLAVERY SOCIETY FIGHTING SLAVERY TODAY WILLIAM WILBERFORCE 1759-1833 | Do Cocoa Plantation Slaves in West Africa Produce Your Favorite Chocolate? Cocoa is the essential ingredient for making chocolates.
  • . Links to other pages dealing with this issue: Links to other pages dealing with slavery in West Africa: Links to pages dealing with consumer awareness: Links to other pages dealing with slavery: y is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
  • . © 2003 by the Anti-Slavery Society.


    Quirks :: Chocolate and Slavery
  • Quirks Chocolate and Slavery Wed Jul 06, 2005 7:14 pm I love chocolate.