Undertaking ethical shoplifting
Context
Ethical shoplifting is a controversial tactic that involves seizing consumer products illegally in order to highlight an ethical issue.
Implementation
In 1994, two leading chains of timber retailers in Britain were the target of an ethical shoplifting campaign by the environmental seizure unit of the Citizen Recovery of Indigenous People's Stolen Property Organization (CRISP-O), to highlight Britain's leading role in the destruction of the Amazon rainforest. The tactic involved seizing products made of mahogany that they claimed was logged illegally, and handing them over to the police, whilst asking the police to prosecute the stores in question. In recent years, successes have included among others, the seizure of 12 Brazilian mahogany items from one of London's most famous department stores.
Counter-claim
The activity of ethical shoplifting in itself is illegal and so is unethical.
Broader
Constrains
Problem
Value
Metadata
Database
Global strategies
Type
(F) Exceptional strategies
Subject
Content quality
Yet to rate
Language
English
1A4N
J4233
DOCID
12042330
D7NID
199281
Last update
Dec 3, 2024
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