Frans van der Hoff (1939-),
or Francisco VanderHoff Boersma as he is called in Latin America,
is a Dutch
missionary who, in collaboration with Nico Roozen and ecumenical development agency Solidaridad, launched Max Havelaar, the first Fairtrade label in 1988.
Frans van der Hoff's contacts with disadvantaged Mexican coffee
producers were key in securing the supply and ensuring the success
of the very first
Fairtrade
certification initiative.
Frans van
der Hoff was born in 1939 in a disciplined farming family in
Southern Netherlands
. He became politically active early on in
student movements during his studies at Radboud
University Nijmegen
. He later received a Ph.D. in political
economy and another one in theology
while studying in Germany
.
In 1970,
van der Hoff moved to Santiago de Chile
to work in the barrios as a
worker-priest. During the 1973 coup, van der Hoff moved to
Mexico
to continue his work in the slums of Mexico City
. Seven years later, he moved to Oaxaca
in the
Southern part of Mexico
. As a
worker-priest, he quickly integrated the community and started to
learn about the misery and economic hardship of local
coffee producers. In 1981, he participates in the
launch of UCIRI (Union de Comunidades Indigenas de la Region del
Istmo), a coffee producer
cooperative
created to bypass local traders (also called
coyotes) and
pool resources.
In 1985,
van der Hoff met Nico Roozen at the
Utrecht
train
station through a mutual friend. Roozen, who was then
responsible for business development at
ecumenical development agency Solidaridad, quickly became interested in van
der Hoff's work. On
November 15,
1988, the two launched together the first
Fairtrade labelling initiative,
Max Havelaar. The initiative offered
disadvantaged
coffee producers following
various social and environmental standards a fair price,
significantly above the market price, for their crop.
The coffee, originating from the UCIRI cooperative, was
imported by Dutch
company
Van Weely, roasted by Neuteboom and then sold directly to world shops and retailers across the Netherlands
. The initiative was a great success and was
replicated in several other markets.
In 2006, Fairtrade-certified sales amounted to approximately €1.6
billion worldwide and over 569 producer organizations, representing
roughly over 1.5 million producers, in 58 developing countries were
Fairtrade certified.
Awards
Van der Hoff was awarded the 2006
North-South Prize by the
Council of Europe.
Van der Hoff was appointed Commander in the
Order of the Crown by the
Belgian Minister of Development Cooperation in 2006.
Van der Hoff received in 2006 an honorary doctorate from the
Catholic University of Louvain in Belgium for his efforts to
establish a 'different economy'.
In 2006 he was awarded the Groeneveldprize from the Groeneveld
Foundation in the Netherlands, for his special efforts for nature
and the preservation of the environment.
He was appointed 'Chevalier de la légion d'honneur' (Knight in the
legion of honour) by French president Chirac in 2005.
See also
References
- Jan van der Kaaij (2004). Building a sustainable, profitable business: Fair
trade coffee. URL accessed on September 24, 2006.
- Fairtrade Labelling Organizations International (2007).
www.fairtrade.net. URL accessed on May 24, 2007.