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1. The Adverse Economic, Health, Environmental, and Human Rights Consequences of the Global Diamond Trade
Martin Donohoe
4. Diamonds Symbols of wealth, power, love, and magical powers
Created from carbon early in the earth’s history under extreme temperature and pressure
Industrial uses: cutting, chemically inert, transmits many wavelengths of light, can be tweaked to hold an electric charge
Discovered in India around 800 B.C.
Commercial mining began in 1866 in South Africa
5. Diamond Production Botswana, Australia, Zaire, Russia and South Africa major mining countries
Antwerp, Tel Aviv, New York and Mumbai (Bombay) major trading centers
Most cutting done in Tel Aviv, Mumbai, New York and Thailand
Major retail markets U.S. (48% of diamond jewelry) and Japan
6. The US Diamond Market, 2005 $900 million worth of rough diamonds and $15 billion worth of polished diamonds imported
Retail sales = $33.7 billion
10. The Diamond Engagement Ring Diamond engagement ring introduced in 1477 (Archduke Ferdinand ? Mary of Burgundy)
De Beers Mining Company
Founded by Cecil Rhodes in 1888
11. Cecil Rhodes(Rhodesia, Rhodes Scholarship, DeBeers Mining Company) “We must find new lands from which we can easily obtain raw materials and at the same time exploit the cheap slave labour that is available from the natives of the colonies. The colonies would also provide a dumping ground for the surplus goods produced in our factories.”
12. Diamond Rings 1939: DeBeers hires N.W. Ayer and Company to make diamonds “a psychological necessity…the larger the diamond, the greater the expression of love.”
Secret engagements popularized (men spend more than women)
By 1942, 80% of engagements in U.S. consecrated with diamond rings (still true today)
Diamonds first worn by stars to the Oscars in 1942
13. Diamond Rings 1947: “A diamond is forever” slogan born
Jewelers instructed to tell (pressure?) men - who buy 90% of all diamonds – to spend at least 2 months salary on the ring
Later: Anniversary diamonds
14. Diamond Rings 1999: Advertising Age magazine declares “A Diamond is Forever” slogan the most effective of the 20th Century
Recognized by 90% of Americans
2003: De Beers begins to market diamonds to single women
“Your left hand says ‘we,’ your right hand says ‘me.’”
15. Pet Jewelry:The Diamond Dog Collar
16. Diamonds: Profits and Losses 120 million carats rough diamonds mined for jewelry per year weigh 24 tons, worth approximately U.S.$14 billion
1 carat diamond retails for $350-$750 in the U.S.
Cost less than $2 billion to extract
Ultimately sell for over $50 billion
17. Diamonds: Profits and Losses Workers desperately poor but hoping to strike it rich in “casino economy”
1 million in Africa
Work under dangerous, unhealthy conditions for pittance
Diamonds may be embedded in asbestos
Workers suffer from cancer, leukemia, silicosis
18. Diamonds: Profits and Losses Middlemen, diamond dealers and exporters earn the lion’s share of profits
Most foreign nationals
Very little profit re-invested in local communities
19. Diamonds: Human Rights Abuses, Conflict and Terrorism Mine owners violate indigenous peoples’ rights via destruction of traditional homelands and forced resettlement
Mining hastens environmental degradation of ecosystems already under severe stress
20. Diamonds: Human Rights Abuses, Conflict and Terrorism Diamonds have been used by rebel armies in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Angola, Liberia, and Sierra Leone to pay for weapons used to fight brutal civil wars
3.8 million deaths
Child soldiers
Forced labor
Sex slavery, HIV
Terrorize local populations (e.g., RUF in Sierra Leone killed and mutilated thousands via amputations with machetes and axes in 1990s)
22. Diamonds: Human Rights Abuses, Conflict and Terrorism Al Qaeda and Hizbollah have used diamond monies to:
Fund terror cells
Hide money targeted by financial institutions
Launder profits from criminal activity
Convert cash into a commodity that is easily transportable and holds its value
23. Diamonds: Human Rights Abuses, Conflict and Terrorism Smuggled and illicit conflict diamonds may amount to as much as 10-15% of diamond jewelry sold worldwide
U.S. State Dept.
20%
Global Witness
25. Alternatives and Solutions Diamonds:
Consider alternatives to traditional engagement ring
Cubic zirconium
Synthetic/cultured diamonds – over 75,000 lbs produced each year worldwide
LifeGems (diamonds created from carbon captured during cremation of human and animal remains!)
Other
26. Alternatives and Solutions Diamonds:
Purchase only verifiable conflict-free diamonds
cut, color, clarity, and conflict
Query jewelers, consumer education, boycotts, protests, shareholder activism
Diamond industry prefers self-regulation
27. Alternatives and Solutions Diamonds: Kimberly Process Certification Scheme
Requires rough controls to assure conflict-free diamonds
Governments license miners
Diamond traders utilize sealed, tamper-proof containers
Integrated computer databases in importing and exporting countries catch discrepancies
28. Alternatives and Solutions Diamonds: Kimberly Process Certification Scheme
Importing countries enact strict customs regulations, backed by thorough inspections and harsh penalties
Supported by diamond industry and UN General Assembly
Involved countries (71) slow and often ineffective in enacting Scheme
29. Symbols of Love: Alternatives and Solutions U.S. Clean Diamond Act of 2003
Mandates participation in Kimberly Process Certification scheme
Money from fines (up to $10,000 for civil and $50,000 for criminal penalties) and seized contraband earmarked for victims of armed conflict
Implementation slow
USA Patriot Act includes anti-money laundering measures
30. Alternatives and Solutions Amnesty International/Global Witness 2006-2007 survey
˝ of companies failed to respond
Only 38% of companies responding able to provide a meaningful account of their policies
Helzberg Diamond Shops, Sterling (Signet), and Tiffany and Co. have most comprehensive policies
32. Safe Diamonds (?)
33. Alternatives and Solutions Consider alternative tokens of affection
Homemade gifts (cards, photo collages, videos, poems, meals, home improvement projects)
Donations to charities
Eco-jewelry made from recycled materials by indigenous peoples
Profits returned to local communities, providing wide-ranging social and economic benefit
34. Conclusions Diamonds as symbols of love are cultural constructs perpetuated in part by the persuasive marketing efforts of multinational corporations
Production involves significant damage to local communities and the environment and harms men, women and children
35. Conclusions Production supports human rights abuses, armed conflict, and even terrorism
Symbols of love should not be constant reminders of death and destruction
Consider alternative symbols of love
Work for social justice and change
36. Paper/References
Donohoe MT. Flowers, diamonds, and gold: The destructive human rights and environmental consequences of symbols of love. Human Rights Quarterly 2008;30:164-82.
http://www.publichealthandsocialjustice.org
http://www.phsj.org
martindonohoe@phsj.org