Ben & Jerry’s — which for years has been raising awareness for social and environmental
causes such as climate
change, voting rights and even recent, regressive governmental policies — also believes everyone deserves the sweet taste of justice,
regardless of race or wealth. Its latest partnership and ice cream flavor
are aimed at creating a future, where that is possible: The company has partnered with the Advancement
Project National Office to launch
Justice ReMix’d
— a flavor created to spotlight structural racism in a broken criminal legal
system.
These are huge, complex issues, but Ben & Jerry’s has been an advocate for social justice and equity for much of its 40 years.
“Our approach to creating social change is to raise up the work non-profits are
doing on the ground,” said co-founder Ben Cohen. “We bring every resource we
have to support them — our business voice, our connection with fans, our Scoop
Shop community; and of course, ice cream. Somehow, it’s easier to talk about
difficult issues over a scoop or two.”
Advancement Project National Office is a national, multi-racial civil rights
organization that works with local grassroots organizers on racial justice
issues.
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“Our country needs to invest in services that build up communities rather than
those that tear them down,” said Executive Director Judith Browne Dianis.
“That means ending a wealth-based pre-trial detention system that locks people
up because they are poor, Black or Brown. It means dismantling the
school-to-prison pipeline, divesting from criminalizing students and investing
in the creation of high-quality education and services. It’s time to reimagine
safety and justice.”
Image credit: Ben & Jerry's
With this new partnership, Ben & Jerry’s is continuing its record of not only
raising awareness about critical social and environmental issues, but also
engaging its customers to care, and act, as
well.
At the grassroots level, Ben & Jerry’s is deploying its Scoop Truck in various
states to spark conversations, activate community members, and give away ice
cream — a tactic that has proven effective in growing social movements. In St.
Louis, the Scoop Truck supported the Close the Workhouse
Coalition by attending 27
events,
giving out 13,420 scoops, and generating more than 1500 messages to public
officials. In Miami, Ben & Jerry’s is working with the Power U Center for
Social Change in calling on the Miami-Dade County School
Board to prioritize funding for mental health and counselors instead of more
security and surveillance.
During his keynote at SB’19 Detroit in June, CEO Matthew McCarthy explained: “We at Ben & Jerry’s never rest on our laurels — we feel a tremendous sense of urgency to keep moving forward to find new ways to drive the values that have propelled this business for four decades.
“What the hell does ice cream have to do with social justice? A lot of the things we do at Ben & Jerry’s don’t actually sell more stuff; I see a lot of marketers out there still trying to find … that perfect cause for [their] brand that allows [them] to grow and sell more stuff. I suggest you screw all of that,” he asserted.
For brands that may be afraid of speaking up about certain issues for fear of alienating their customer base, he said: “Part of transparency is having the courage, the openness to share your message — that’s part of why consumers and people will trust you and pick your business over another. … We’re not here in business to please everybody, or go to the lowest common denominator of acceptance — we’d much rather be loved by a few at Ben & Jerry’s than unoffensive to many.”
With its cinnamon and chocolate ice creams with gobs of cinnamon bun dough and
spicy fudge brownies, Justice ReMix’d is part of Ben & Jerry’s multi-year
campaign for criminal justice reform. Justice seekers with a sweet tooth can
find the audacious new flavor in grocery stores nationwide and in
Scoop Shops, and can learn more about the company’s criminal justice
reform campaign at benjerry.com.
Meanwhile, the activist ice cream brand continues its climate action efforts: It
has joined other vocal brands Patagonia,
Lush and Seventh Generation in
planning to close stores on September 20, to take part in the Global Climate
Strike
— a worldwide day of climate strikes organized by a coalition of groups
including 350.org, Greenpeace, SEIU, March On and Extinction
Rebellion. The Global Climate Strike is expected to spark peaceful protests
across the globe, acting as an unofficial prelude to the UN Climate Summit in
New York the following week.
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Sustainable Brands Staff
Published Sep 4, 2019 2pm EDT / 11am PDT / 7pm BST / 8pm CEST