Starbucks: slave and child labour found at certified coffee farms in Minas Gerais
Starbucks: slave and child labour found at certified coffee farms in Minas Gerais
Starbucks: slave and child labour found at certified coffee farms in Minas Gerais
Hasn’t Starbucks had multiple instances of these sorts of headlines? I feel like nothing really happens about it
Standard corporate cycle. Use illegal/slave labor, get caught, media tour oopsie, pay fine aka cost of business, everyone forgets, repeat
Owners/ceos need to be held accountable so they actually care what is happening
While I generally agree that C-levels need to be held accountable, I fear that will just lead to paid patsies taking the fall. I think the board of directors should be held accountable.
Owners/ceos need to be held accountable so they actually care what is happening
This. Until someone with real power is actually held accountable for the shit they purposefully or passively allow, nothing will be done about it as long as long as it remains profitable.
everyone forgets
Do we? I will never forget Starbucks uses child slaves. What good does that do?
Starbucks will not have wanted to be using slaves, they only pay the workers 2¢ on the cup anyway. It is a fairly minor expense in the greater scheme of things.
What it is, is an emergent risk in extended labour chains (or "cascades"). Particularly prevalent in harvest work. At some point your supply chain transparency breaks down, how ever many steps of outsourcing deep that might be.
Unsurprisingly the gangmaster not actually paying his workers is likely the lowest bidder, so in the cruellest sense of the "free" market, every company wants to use slave labour. But to a global business with at least some accountability, this is a massive fuck up in oversight.
You could think of it as stochastic slave trading, if you wanted to over-intellectualise it. Certainly oligopsonies generate market pressures that strongly incentivise the emergence of modern slavery and labour abuse in the supply chain.
I'm no corporate shill, but the verification and constant need for reverification must be pretty challenging to enforce.
What's the point of certification if this still happens??
Marketing. Starbucks pays somebody to be able to say "if it happens, it's not my fault, I'm the victim here".
People that care about the impact of their choices as consumers can be hoodwinked and retained as loyal customer basis.
Let's face it: Even most people who read this thinks, "That sucks, someone should do something about that," then goes back to drinking Starbucks
Slave and child labour call that Huckleberry Finn