Stichting Max Havelaar (or
the Max Havelaar Foundation in English) is the
Dutch
member of
FLO International, which unites 23
Fairtrade producer and labelling
initiatives across Europe, Asia, Latin America,
North America, Africa, Australia and
New
Zealand
. Several of these corresponding
organizations in other European countries also use the Max Havelaar
name.
The
name comes from Max Havelaar, which is
both the title and the main character of a Dutch 19th-century novel
(written by Multatuli) critical of Dutch
colonialism in the Dutch East Indies
.
The Max
Havelaar label, the world's first Fairtrade Certification Mark,
was officially launched by Stichting Max Havelaar on 15 November
1988, under the efforts of Nico Roozen,
Frans van der Hoff and Dutch
ecumenical development agency Solidaridad. The label, used to
distinguish
Fairtrade
products from conventional ones, aims to improve "the living and
working conditions of small farmers and agricultural workers in
disadvantaged regions". The first fairly traded coffee originated
from the
UCIRI cooperative in Mexico and was
imported by Dutch company
Van Weely,
roasted by
Neuteboom, before being sold
directly to
worldshops and, for the first
time, to mainstream retailers across the Netherlands.
Today,
Fairtrade products are
available in several Dutch
supermarket chains such as Jumbo, which sells an
average of 18 Fairtrade
products per store and Super de Boer,
which sells an average of 17 products per store.
Fairtrade products are also
available at Albert Heijn supermarkets across the Netherlands
.
In 2006,
Fairtrade labelled sales in
the Netherlands
amounted to € 41 million, a 12 % year-to-year
increase.
Court case against the province of Groningen
The Dutch
province of Groningen
was sued in 2007 by Dutch coffee supplier Douwe Egberts for explicitly requiring its
coffee suppliers to meet fair trade criteria set by Stichting Max
Havelaar, most notably the payment of a minimum price and a
development premium to producer cooperatives. Douwe Egberts,
which sells a number of coffee brands under self-developed ethical
criteria, believed the requirements were discriminatory. After
several months of discussions and legal challenges, the province of
Groningen prevailed in a well-publicized judgement in favor of the
province. Coen de Ruiter, director of Stichting Max Havelaar,
called the victory a landmark event: "it provides governmental
institutions the freedom in their purchasing policy to require
suppliers to provide coffee that bears the fair trade criteria, so
that a substantial and meaningful contribution is made in the fight
against poverty through the daily cup of coffee".
See also
References
- Max Havelaar | Max Havelaar
- Zibb.nl (2006). Plus verslaat AH met bio-assortiment URL
accessed on November 8, 2006.
- Fairtrade Labelling Organizations International (2007).
Figures. URL accessed on October 9, 2007.
- Max Havelaar Foundation (2007).
[85.82.218.199/fileadmin/Bruger_filer/Dokument_database/IKAvaerktoej/EU_siden/Max_Havalaar.pdf
Dutch Province of Groningen wins summary brought by Doug Egberts
and can continue specifying fair trade coffee]
External links