RugMark Introduces GoodWeave™
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GoodWeave will, in time, represent an enhanced set of values that places the RugMark mission in a broader context of environmental and social responsibility.
After 15 years of protecting children and promoting ethical carpet and rug production, RugMark International (RMI) is phasing out its existing certification label and logo and replacing it with a new brand, and a new plan to strengthen and enhance its core mission.
GoodWeave will have the same meaning as the RugMark label: a deep commitment to
- the deterrence of child labor,
- the education and rehabilitation of rescued child workers in the carpet industry, and
- the families and communities of more than 3,200 children in India and Nepal that we actively serve.
Both the existing RugMark label and the new GoodWeave label assure that no children under age 14 were employed by the facility responsible for making the labeled rug.
In addition, GoodWeave will, in time, represent an enhanced set of values that places the RugMark mission in a broader context of environmental and social responsibility. Through a new set of standards under development, GoodWeave label directives will be more rigorous, transparent and defined, and with input from a multi-stakeholder standards committee. For guidance in this effort, RMI is an associate member of the International Social and Environmental Accreditation and Labeling Alliance (ISEAL), a global leader in setting norms and best practices for certification. The new RugMark International website at www.GoodWeave.net will make policies and procedures available to any interested party and facilitate comment on standard-setting.
If you are a RugMark licensee or marketing partner, visit www.GoodWeave.net/resources to download GoodWeave materials. For general information, please contact us at info@GoodWeave.org or (202) 234-9050.
Partner with GoodWeave
By participating in the GoodWeave program, interior designers, retailers and importers can make a difference while growing their business.
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 the GoodWeave certification program more than 3,600 kids like Manju have been rescued, rehabilitated and educated, and thousands more deterred from entering the work force.
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