Cobalt mining and responsibility
An analysis of the meaning of ethical products
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.5324/eip.v18i1.5128Abstract
The article discusses the meaning of “ethical” in the context of ethical goods. Terms like “ethical” or “responsible” have assumed new meanings when used to indicate the quality of a product or material. In the article, we analyse the transformed notion of “ethical”, its limits and extensions, using the case of cobalt mining and electronics as an illustrative example. As a non-substitutable material needed by the booming electronics industry and mined in horrendous conditions, the use of cobalt brings forth difficult questions about responsibility. We approach this question from the perspective of the meaning of “ethical” cobalt, and thereby ethical laptops. We use data collected in the context of a CSO project focused on “ethical laptops” and a literature review, and place this in the context of applied ethics. In conclusion, we show how the notion of “ethical products” is complicated by the various possible meanings of responsibility and difficult choices between disengagement from unethical practices and deeper engagement for changing these practices.
Keywords: Ethical trade, Global value chains; Ethical theory; Developing countries; Electronics; Stakeholders
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Copyright (c) 2024 Teppo Eskelinen, Jawaria Khan, Anna Härri
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.