About the Organization

GoodWeave® works through its certification program to end child labor in the carpet industry and to offer educational opportunities to children in weaving communities. GoodWeave was founded on a simple premise: If enough people demand certified child-labor-free rugs, manufacturers will employ only skilled, adult artisans, and children will no longer be exploited in the carpet industry.

The use of child labor in handmade rugs drew worldwide attention during the 1980s. Studies by the International Labor Organization (ILO), the U.S. Department of Labor and human rights groups revealed that the industry was employing and exploiting large numbers of children. Many were found to be victims of debt bondage or forced labor, practices specifically banned by the United Nations and the ILO and condemned as forms of slavery.

By the late 1980s, Kailash Satyarthi, Chairman of the South Asian Coalition on Children in Servitude (SACCS), was leading the global fight against child labor. Seeking to create an industry-wide market incentive for manufacturers to stop exploiting children, he founded GoodWeave in September 1994, as a coalition of nongovernmental organizations, businesses, government entities and multilateral groups like UNICEF.

The first carpets bearing the predecessor of the GoodWeave label were exported from India at the beginning of 1995, mainly to Germany. Certification efforts later expanded to Nepal, and both England and the United States joined Germany as importer countries, with GoodWeave International as the body overseeing the country-level offices.

By building both the supply of and demand for child-labor-free rugs, GoodWeave has catalyzed a profound shift in the marketplace. Since GoodWeave's founding, more than 7.5 million certified carpets have been sold in Europe and North America, and the number of children trapped in exploitative carpet-making work has dropped from 1 million to 250,000.

In 2009, the organization launched GoodWeave, a new brand and label for its expanding certification program, previously known as RugMark. The GoodWeave label represents an important step in the organization’s evolution, as it rolls out a new standard that will address environmental and adult working conditions in addition to its strict no-child-labor criteria.

To learn more, visit the section Where GoodWeave Works.

Donate

You can help us end child labor and transform the lives of the thousands of children trapped in carpet work by making a tax-deductible donation today. Every dollar makes a difference.

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Children's Stories

At the age of five, Manju was already working on the rug looms. While she has since been found and freed from illegal carpet work, some 250,000 children throughout South Asia still toil in obscurity. Through GoodWeave more than 3,700 kids like Manju have been rescued, rehabilitated and educated, and thousands more deterred from entering the work force.

More Stories »

ISEAL Alliance

ISEAL Alliance member

GoodWeave is one of only 13 full-members of the ISEAL Alliance, the global association for sustainability standards whose Codes of Good Practice are seen as global references for developing and implementing credible standards.

Partner with GoodWeave

By partnering with GoodWeave, interior designers, retailers and importers can make a difference while growing their business.