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National Consumers League

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Non-profit advocacy organization in the USA
National Consumers League Logo

TheNational Consumers League, founded in 1899, is an Americanconsumer organization.[1] The National Consumers League is a private, nonprofit advocacy group[2] representing consumers[3] on marketplace and workplace issues. The NCL provides government, businesses, and other organizations with the consumer's perspective on concerns includingchild labor,[4] privacy,food safety,[5] and medication information.

The organization was chartered in 1899 by social reformers Jane Addams[6] and Josephine Lowell.[7] Its first general secretary was Florence Kelley.[8] Under Kelley's direction, the League's early focus was to oppose the harsh, unregulatedworking conditions many Americans were forced to endure. The founding principles of the NCL are "that the working conditions[9] we accept for our fellow citizens should be reflected by our purchases, and that consumers should demand safety and reliability from the goods and services they buy." The league's focus continues to be to promote a fair marketplace for workers and consumers.[10]

Goals

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The NCL based their organization on the ideals ofconsumer citizenship, in which it is a citizens duty to advocate for government legislation and use their individual purchasing power to shape a more ethical consumer market. The league used tools such as investigating and educating to promote change. League members would often do thorough investigations in order to study the relevant social problems within their community. They would then create a report and present it to other community members often through public events, women's talk clubs, or fairs.[11]  In its early years it would award a company or producer with a "White Label" which signified that the league was in approval of their ethicality and it would be recognized by other informed consumers.[12] As they progressed they turned their attention more toward implementing legislation that would provide protection to exploited workers and consumers. In the 1970s they shifted their focus onto the well being of consumers as individuals rather than the focus on working conditions.[11]

Prominent Members

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Part of exhibit, N.Y.C.L. and Consumers League regarding the working conditions of the people who made clothing as sketched by journalistMarguerite Martyn, 1910
Florence Kelley as sketched by journalistMarguerite Martyn, 1910

Florence Kelley

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Florence Kelley was the general secretary of the National Consumers League from its founding in 1899 to her death in 1931.[13]

In founding the National Consumers League in 1899, one of Kelley's primary concerns was that the league oppose sweatshop labor.[14] Kelley also worked to establish a work-day limited to eight hours.[15] She worked in support of unionization to further protect workers. In 1907 she participated in the Supreme Court[16] caseMuller v. Oregon,[17] which sought to overturn limits to the hours female workers could work in non-hazardous professions.[12] Kelley helped to file the Brandeis Brief,[18] which included sociological and medical evidence of the hazards of working long hours, and set the precedent of the Supreme Court's recognition of sociological evidence, which was used to great effect later in the caseBrown v. Board of Education.[19] In addition, Kelley assisted in organizing the National Association For Advancement of Colored People.[20]

Esther Peterson

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Esther Peterson's[21] involvement in the NCL played an important role in consumer politics and worked within government office as well as the consumer market itself. She was a long time member of the NCL, having worked with them as early as 1944 and served as the organizations president from 1974 to 1976. Peterson worked with theWhite House as a Special Assistant on Consumer Affairs from 1964 to 1970 duringLyndon B.Johnson's[22] presidency. She carried on her position as director of the Office of Consumer Affairs until 1981. Peterson was also a consumer advisor for the supermarket chain,Giant,[23] from 1970 to 1976. Peterson also worked closely with presidentJimmy Carter's[24] office to represent consumers in policy making. Peterson dedicated her work to consumer protections like accuratefood labeling and advocated for protections regarding class, race, and gender in the workforce and consumer market. Peterson made efforts to improve the market in ways that would benefit both business and consumer.[25]

Eras of Activism

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New Deal Era

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In the 1920s and 1930s, the NCL's focus was set on lobbying for a gendered-minimum wage. As the U.S. entered the depression they began to lobby for fair working conditions for both women and men and contributed to the passing of the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938,[26] one of their first legislative achievements, which set a standard for working conditions and outlawed child labor.[11] In addition they fought for the use of the codes for fair competition through pressuring theNational Recovery Administration.[27] The NCL experienced some opposition through the New Deal Era from the National Women's Party[28] over differing beliefs of gendered-wages.[29]

Current leadership

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Sally Greenberg, formerly a senior attorney at Consumers Union (CU),[30] is the chief executive officer of the National Consumers League. Greenberg has worked with members of Congress, theNational Highway Traffic Safety Administration, other federal agencies, the media and consumer safety organizations to shape policy on such issues as product safety, auto safety, and legal and liability reform.[31]

Programs

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LifeSmarts[32] is a free program designed to teach teenagers consumer rights and responsibilities as they pertain to health, finance, technology, and the environment.

Fraud.org[33] is a reporting platform through which the National Consumers League collects information about scams, extracts trends from data, and forwards reports to law enforcement.

The Child Labor Coalition[34] as formed in 1989 to combat child labor and protect teen workers from health and safety hazards. It is co-chaired by the National Consumers League and theAmerican Federation of Teachers.[35]

Script Your Future[36] is a public awareness initiative which teaches patients undergoing long-term prescription therapy the importance of communicating with healthcare professionals and following regimens carefully.[37]

Criticism

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NCL has faced criticism from progressive groups and labor unions for receiving funding from corporations with a financial stake in the industries where NCL offers policy recommendations. In 1998, Mother Jones[38] argued that NCL "has been saturated in recent years with financial contributions from major U.S. corporations to the point where it can no longer be considered a legitimate independent consumer or public interest group."[39]

In 2021, union leaders atCommunications Workers of America,[40] United Food and Commercial Workers,[41] and United Auto Workers[42] resigned from NCL's board over NCL's involvement with and financial support from Amazon.[43]

See also

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References

[edit]
  1. ^"Consumer organization",Wikipedia, 2025-05-30, retrieved2025-07-21
  2. ^"Advocacy group",Wikipedia, 2025-07-19, retrieved2025-07-21
  3. ^"Consumer",Wikipedia, 2025-07-17, retrieved2025-07-21
  4. ^"Child labour",Wikipedia, 2025-07-11, retrieved2025-07-21
  5. ^"Food safety",Wikipedia, 2025-07-14, retrieved2025-07-21
  6. ^"Jane Addams",Wikipedia, 2025-06-21, retrieved2025-07-21
  7. ^"Josephine Shaw Lowell",Wikipedia, 2025-06-23, retrieved2025-07-21
  8. ^"Florence Kelley",Wikipedia, 2025-06-21, retrieved2025-07-21
  9. ^"Outline of working time and conditions",Wikipedia, 2024-11-15, retrieved2025-07-21
  10. ^National Consumers League (2009).A Brief Look Back on 100+ Years of Advocacy. nclnet.org. Retrieved on: 2012-01-06.
  11. ^abcJacobs, Meg (2001)."Review of Civilizing Capitalism: The National Consumers' League, Women's Activism, and Labor Standards in the New Deal Era".The Business History Review.75 (3):610–613.doi:10.2307/3116396.ISSN 0007-6805.JSTOR 3116396.
  12. ^abDreier, Peter (2012)."FLORENCE KELLEY: Pioneer of Labor Reform".New Labor Forum.21 (1):70–76.doi:10.4179/NLF.211.0000011.ISSN 1095-7960.JSTOR 41408604.S2CID 153894180.
  13. ^Vose, Clement E. (1957)."The National Consumers' League and the Brandeis Brief".Midwest Journal of Political Science.1 (3/4):267–290.doi:10.2307/2109304.ISSN 0026-3397.JSTOR 2109304.
  14. ^"Anti-sweatshop movement",Wikipedia, 2025-02-23, retrieved2025-07-21
  15. ^"Eight-hour day movement",Wikipedia, 2025-07-21, retrieved2025-07-21
  16. ^"Supreme Court of the United States",Wikipedia, 2025-07-19, retrieved2025-07-21
  17. ^"Muller v. Oregon",Wikipedia, 2025-05-26, retrieved2025-07-21
  18. ^"Brandeis brief",Wikipedia, 2024-05-26, retrieved2025-07-21
  19. ^"Brown v. Board of Education",Wikipedia, 2025-07-21, retrieved2025-07-21
  20. ^"NAACP",Wikipedia, 2025-07-21, retrieved2025-07-21
  21. ^"Esther Peterson",Wikipedia, 2024-07-02, retrieved2025-07-21
  22. ^"Lyndon B. Johnson",Wikipedia, 2025-07-11, retrieved2025-07-21
  23. ^"Giant Food (Landover)",Wikipedia, 2025-07-16, retrieved2025-07-21
  24. ^"Jimmy Carter",Wikipedia, 2025-07-18, retrieved2025-07-21
  25. ^Black, Lawrence (2018-12-28)."The market imperfections of business, shoppers and consumerism: Esther Peterson and the legacies of the National Consumers' League".Historical Research.92 (255):205–227.doi:10.1111/1468-2281.12253.ISSN 0950-3471.S2CID 159944240.
  26. ^"Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938",Wikipedia, 2025-06-30, retrieved2025-07-21
  27. ^"National Recovery Administration",Wikipedia, 2025-04-03, retrieved2025-07-21
  28. ^"National Woman's Party",Wikipedia, 2025-04-13, retrieved2025-07-21
  29. ^Simon, Bryant (2001)."Review of Civilizing Capitalism: The National Consumers' League, Women's Activism, and Labor Standards in the New Deal Era".Enterprise & Society.2 (2):411–413.doi:10.1093/es/2.2.411.ISSN 1467-2227.JSTOR 23699587.
  30. ^"Consumer Reports",Wikipedia, 2025-06-14, retrieved2025-07-21
  31. ^"Leadership – National Consumers League". Retrieved2020-12-09.
  32. ^"Home - LifeSmarts". Retrieved2025-07-22.
  33. ^"Fraud".fraud.org. Retrieved2025-07-22.
  34. ^"Stop Child Labor – The Child Labor Coalition – the Website of the Child Labor Coalition".stopchildlabor.org. Retrieved2025-07-22.
  35. ^Green America,"Green America and The Child Labor Coalition Warn of Curtis Ellis Heading DOL's Bureau of International Labor Affairs",PR Newswire, 2017-05-18
  36. ^"Script Your Future".scriptyourfuture.org. Retrieved2025-07-22.
  37. ^Damita Thomas,"NEOMED College of Pharmacy Wins National Awards",Patch Media, 2017-05-31
  38. ^"Mother Jones (magazine)",Wikipedia, 2025-07-18, retrieved2025-07-21
  39. ^Russell Mohkiber,"A Corporate Takeover",Mother Jones, 1998-05-05
  40. ^"Communications Workers of America",Wikipedia, 2025-05-24, retrieved2025-07-21
  41. ^"United Food and Commercial Workers",Wikipedia, 2025-06-30, retrieved2025-07-21
  42. ^"United Auto Workers",Wikipedia, 2025-07-02, retrieved2025-07-21
  43. ^Joshua Eiedelson,"Amazon Funding Spurs Union Exodus From Consumer Group Board",Bloomberg, 2021-08-13

Further reading

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  • Sanville, Florence L.; Goldmark, Josephine; Miller, Curt; McKenney, James H.; Bixby, James T.; Lakey, Alice; Satterlee, Herbert L.; Kinnicutt, G. Hermann (1909). "The Consumer's Control of Production: The Work of the National Consumers' League".[1]The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science.34: 1–83.
  • Josephine Goldmark, et al. "The Work of the National Consumers' League. During the Year Ending March 1, 1910",Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, Vol. 36, Supplement (Sept. 1910) pp. 1–75JSTOR 1011480, primary source

External links

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  1. ^Cite error: The named referenceScript Your Future was invoked but never defined (see thehelp page).
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