首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
Teens Try to Change the World One Purchase at a Time When classes adjourn here at the Fayerweather Street School, eighth-grade
Teens Try to Change the World One Purchase at a Time When classes adjourn here at the Fayerweather Street School, eighth-grade
admin
2011-01-14
34
问题
Teens Try to Change the World One Purchase at a Time
When classes adjourn here at the Fayerweather Street School, eighth-graders ignore the mall down the street and go straight to the place they consider much cooler: the local natural-foods grocer. There they gather in groups of ten or more sometimes, smitten by a marketing atmosphere that links attractiveness to eating well. When time comes to buy something even as small as a chocolate treat, they feel good knowing a farmer somewhere probably received a good price. "Food is something you need to stay alive," says eighth-grader Emma Lewis. "Paying farmers well is really important because if we didn’t have any unprocessed food, we’d all be living on candy."
Eating morally, as some describe it, is becoming a priority for teenagers as well as adults in their early 20s. What began a decade ago as a concern on college campuses to shun clothing made in overseas sweatshops has given birth to a parallel phenomenon in the food and beverage industries. Here, youthful shoppers are leveraging their dollars in a bid to reduce pesticide usage, limit deforestation, and make sure farmers aren’t left with a pittance on payday. Once again, college campuses are setting the pace. Students at 30 colleges have helped persuade administrators to make sure all cafeteria coffee comes with a "Fair Trade" label, which means bean pickers in Latin America and Africa were paid higher than the going rates. Their peers on another 300 campuses are pushing to follow suit, according to Students United for Fair Trade in Washington, D.C.
Coffee is just the beginning. Bon App6tit, an institutional food-service provider based in California, relies on organic and locally grown produce. In each year since 2001, more than 25 colleges have asked the company to bid on their food-service contracts. Though Bon App6tit intentionally limits its growth, its collegiate client list has grown from 58 to 71 in that period. "It’s really just been in the last five years that we’ve seen students become concerned with where their food was coming from," says Maisie Ganzler, Bon Appetit’s director of strategic initiatives. "Prior to that, students were excited to be getting sugared cereal."
To reach a younger set that often doesn’t drink coffee, Fair Trade importer Equal Exchange rolled out a line of cocoa in 2003 and chocolate bars in 2004. Profits in both sectors have justified the project, says Equal Exchange co-president Rob Everts. What’s more, dozens of schools have contacted the firm to use its products in fundraisers and as classroom teaching tools. "Kids often are the ones who agitate in the family" for recycling and other eco-friendly practices, Mr. Everts says. "So it’s a ripe audience."
Concerns of today’s youthful food shoppers seem to reflect in some ways the idealism that inspired prior generations to Join boycotts in solidarity with farm workers. Today’s efforts are distinct in that youthful consumers say they don’t want to make sacrifices. They want high-quality, competitively priced goods that don’t require exploitation of workers or the environment. They’ll gladly reward companies that deliver. One activist who shares this sentiment and hears it repeatedly from her peers is Summer Rayne Oakes, a recent college graduate and fashion model who promotes stylish Fair Trade clothing. "I’m not going to buy something that can’t stand on its own or looks bad just because it’s socially responsible," Ms. Oakes says. "My generation has come to terms with the fact that we’re all consumers, and we all buy something. So if I do have to buy food, what are the consequences?"
Wanting to ameliorate the world’s big problems can be frustrating, especially for those who feel ineffective because they’re young. Marketers are figuring out that teenagers resent this feeling of powerlessness and are pushing products that make young buyers feel as though they’re making a difference, says Michael Wood, vice president of Teenage Research Unlimited. His example: Ethos Water from Starbucks, which contributes five cents from every bottle sold to water-purification centres in developing countries. "This is a very easy way for young people to contribute. All they have to do is buy bottled water," Mr. Wood says. "Buying products or supporting companies that give them ways to support global issues is one way for them to get involved, and they really appreciate that."
Convenience is also driving consumer activism. Joe Curnow, national coordinator of United Students for Fair Trade, says she first got involved about five years ago as a high schooler when she spent time hanging out in cafes. Buying coffee with an eco-friendly label "was a very easy way for me to express what I believed in," she says. For young teens, consumption is their first foray into activism. At the Fayerweather Street School, Emma Lewis teamed up with classmates Kayla Kleinman and Therese LaRue to sell Fair Trade chocolate, cocoa, and other products at a school fundraiser in November. When the tally reached $8,000, they realised they were striking a chord.
Some adults hasten to point out the limitations of ethical consumption as a tool for doing good deeds and personal growth. Gary Lindsay, director of Children’s Ministries, encourages Fair Trade purchases, but he also organises children to collect toys for foster children and save coins for a playground-construction project in Tanzania. He says it helps them learn to enjoy helping others even when they’re not getting anything tangible in return. "When we’re benefiting, how much are we really giving? Is it really sacrifice?" Mr. Lindsay asks. Of Fair Trade products, he says: "Those things are great when we’re given opportunities like that once In a while, but I think for us to expect that we should get something out of everything we do is a very selfish attitude to have."
*
选项
答案
encourages
解析
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/4iVO777K
本试题收录于:
雅思阅读题库雅思(IELTS)分类
0
雅思阅读
雅思(IELTS)
相关试题推荐
SurilandcannotbothexportwheatandkeepbreadplentifulandaffordableinSuriland.Accordingly,Suriland’swheatfarmersar
AvalanchesatRogersPassinGlacierNationalParkkilledmorethan200peoplebetween1885and1910.buttheyarenowcontrolle
Theprimelendingrateisakeyrateintheeconomy:notonlyaretheinterestratesonmostloanstosmallandmedium-sizedbus
Inanyfield—business,politics,education,government—thoseinpowershouldberequiredtostepdownafterfiveyears.Writ
A、Thegravitationalattractionofsupernovasadjacenttotheregionofthechimney’sformationB、Theeffectofentropyonthere
WhileexaminationofEisenstein’sworkhasyieldedbetterunderstandingsoffilmtheory,suchattentionisrarelygranted
Whileperformershavealwaysattemptedto______thefactthatpianoisfundamentallyapercussioninstrument,thatparticularp
Trendstowardreformhighlighttheinternationalappealofdecentralization,buttherealitiesofeducationalandsocial
Althoughthescientist’srecommendationsmayhavebeen(i)______,thestudentshadtroublefollowinghis(ii)______presentation
Whilenot______theargumentsinfavoroftheproposalfornewhighwayconstruction,thegovernorneverthelessdecidedtovetoth
随机试题
原始记录应包括哪些识别信息?
与纤维蛋白渗出过程不相关的病变或疾病是
流行性脑膜脊髓炎的病变部位主要在
A、肺部体征出现的早B、肺部体征不明显,除发热外,刺激性干咳较为突出C、突发喘憋,呼气性呼吸困难D、肺部有多发小脓肿E、肺部X线示斑片状阴影小儿金黄色葡萄球菌肺炎最具特点的是()
财务管理的重要环节是()。
下列方法中,适用于企业战略控制的有()。
不符合商品销售收入确认条件但已发出的商品的成本,应当在资产负债表的“存货”项目中反映。()
“举例说明共同进化和生物多样性形成的原因”是“现代生物进化理论的主要内容”一节的教学目标之一。关于该目标,下列叙述正确的是()。
根据以下资料,回答问题。2011年全国农民工总量达到25278万人,增长4.4%。从就业地点看,在直辖市务工的占10.3%,在省会城市务工的占20.5%,在地级市务工的占33.9%,在地级以上大中城市务工的农民工比上年提高1.7个百分点。外出农民工月均工
考生文件夹下有一个数据库文件“samp3.accdh”,其中存在已经设计好的表对象“tEmployee”和“tGroup”及查询对象“qEmployee”,同时还设计出以“qEmployee”为数据源的报表对象“rEmployee”。请在此基础上按照以下要
最新回复
(
0
)