Retailers have been participating in the movement by offering fair trade products.
According to their website, money spent on fair trade products pays for children's school fees, better nutrition, and health care.
Student groups have also been increasingly active in the past years promoting fair trade products.
All fair trade products must meet standards such as these.
The attitude-behavior gap can help explain why ethical and fair trade products take up less than 1% of the market.
The owner is committed to promoting fair trade products.
In 2000, the company introduced a line of fair trade products.
With total sales of around $17.5 million last year, these two groups account for almost half of American fair trade products.
That's going to lead to innovation in trade products in a way that we have not seen for a few years.
They want support for fair trade products and for free trade unions.