I was really excited to read an informed book about ethical sourcing/responsible business practice, conscious consumerism, etc. This seemed more like a love letter to her own business and their specific imports (which is, albeit, an impactful company which support artisans whose business provides them financial freedoms to break the cycle of poverty) and weakly structured, scattered arguments.
The first 2 chapters of this book describes conscious consumerism in narrow context, which I would like to see better and immediately represented by equitable trade relationships, fair wages and safe/supportive working conditions, green materials innovation, companies committed to reducing carbon emissions, transparency, etc. Nearly gave up after almost an entire (and worse yet, leading argument) chapter about the wonders of customization (ie tacky monogrammed towels and recycled Christmas ornaments) complete with bulleted list of definitions of customization techniques !!! I’d like to instead read more about recognizing brands with good/bad practices and encouraging a more conscious market. With that being said, the latter 2/3 of the book is so much better. But man… having a hard time getting over the intro and customization chapter.
There is also something ephemeral and narrow to me about the push to improve economies in impoverished countries by encouraging them to make Christmas ornaments and tote bags out of literal trash. Supporting these imports immediately and directly finances individuals who need it and, on a grassroots level, puts more money into small economies, yet shouldn’t we be thinking bigger? Establishing REAL import production that can appeal to global markets, single companies that bring hundreds of jobs and money to local economies, or local branches supplying or manufacture for larger companies that hire and are managed by locals, encouraging literacy and professional development in these communities?
I really respect her business and hope more sustainable for-profit philanthropy projects continue to flourish!
Happy to have learned about her wonderful company but not what I was hoping for in writing or content.