Seikatsu Club Consumers' Co-operative Union explained

Seikatsu Club Consumers’ Co-operative Union
Native Name:生活クラブ事業連合生活協同組合連合会
Native Name Lang:ja
Type:Cooperative federation
Location City:Shinjuku, Tokyo
Location Country:Japan
Key People:Koichi Kato, Chairperson; Yoshiyuki Fukuoka, Executive Director
Area Served:Japan
Homepage:seikatsuclub.coop

The Seikatsu Club Consumers’ Co-operative Union (SCCCU;) is a Japanese federation of consumer co-operatives headquartered in Tokyo. It was formed in 1965 and has 307,000 members, most of whom are women.

SCCCU is divided into groups of households who order food collectively and offers only 3,000 products, and mostly staple foods. As the co-operative federation is concerned with food safety, it buys organic food and shuns those generated from genetically modified organisms.[1] SCCCU also produces its own milk and biodegradable soap.[2]

In 1979, SCCCU started running candidates for political office through the Tokyo Seikatsusha Network and now has over 100 members who serve as local councillors.

The federation received a Right Livelihood Award in 1989 "for creating the most successful, sustainable model of production and consumption in the industrialised world."[3]

Member co-operatives

External links

Notes and References

  1. Rosenberg, Dorothy Goldin. Initiatives in feminism, environmentalism and action. Alternatives. 1 April 1995.
  2. MacLeod, Andrew. The shopping club: members of a consumer co-op discover that their buying power can ensure ethical, affordable and healthy choices. Briarpatch. 1 December 2002.
  3. Web site: Seikatsu Club Consumers' Cooperative. The Right Livelihood Award. en-US. 2020-01-08.