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FJC Standards

FJC Standards


Front Matter

Social Stewardship Standards for Farms, Ranches, and Other Food and Agriculture Businesses #

2019 Published Version 4 #

“Eating is an agricultural act.” -Wendell Berry

Our Stakeholders #

The Agricultural Justice Project (AJP) is stakeholder-driven, governed and committed to the  principles of democratic leadership. We consider stakeholders those who work in the food and  agricultural system who shoulder too many of the burdens and enjoy too few of the benefits of how  our food and agricultural system operates. AJP has identified key stakeholder groups as: Workers  (farmworkers and food system workers throughout the food chain, including apprentices and  interns), Farmers, Retailers, Food Businesses (manufacturers, processors or brand holders), and  Indigenous Communities. In 2020 AJP is adding two new stakeholder groups that will be filled  moving forward: 1. Black, Indigenous, and People of Color (BIPOC) Farmers and 2. Food Insecure  Individuals, Families, and Communities. AJP is governed by three committees (who make decisions  via consensus) and are made up of representatives from different food system stakeholder groups:  the Advisory Council, Standards Committee, and a Board of Directors. The governing bodies can  also include individuals with expertise related to AJP’s work. 

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Executive Summary

The Agricultural Justice Project bases these standards for fair trade and social justice in the food system on the Declaration of Human Rights, the conventions of the International Labor Organization and the experience of farmers, farmworkers, and other participants in the current food system in the United States and Canada.

The Agricultural Justice Project works to transform the existing agricultural system into one based on empowerment, justice and fairness for all who labor from farm to retail. Central to our mission are the principles that all humans deserve respect, the freedom to live with dignity and nurture community, and share responsibility for preserving the earth’s resources for future generations.

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Background

General Principles #

For the authors, as for many organic farmers around the world and the hundreds of organizations which have signed on to the IFOAM principles, social justice and social rights are integral aspects of organic agriculture, processing, distribution, and retailing.

These principles of social justice are essential:

  1. To allow everyone involved in organic and sustainable production and processing a quality of life that meets their basic needs and allows an adequate return and satisfaction from their work, including a safe working environment.

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Applying the Standards

What Certification Means #

Standards are outlined for both labor and trade practices of the operation including: working conditions, pay and benefits, participation and training for workers and interns, negotiations, pricing, and contracting between buyers and sellers. All entities are welcomed to apply. Please see the AJP Policy Manual for our requirements regarding partial chain labeling and multi-ingredient products.

AJP and Organic Certification #

AJP standards can be applied to a continuum of operations, however specific standards compliance for health/safety and toxic exposure requirements regarding farmers, workers, children and interns will be different depending on the type of operation and the materials used. In general, AJP standards are designed to ensure a movement away from use of chemical industrial agriculture toward more bio-intensive, organic and regenerative agriculture.

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