Smartphones are everywhere and require complicated decisions. First, you have
to figure out which best meets your needs and budget. Then, you have to figure
out how to use them effectively.
Now, they also illustrate an increasingly common and difficult ethical choice.
This progression from consumable product to ethical dilemma seems an increasing
feature of globalization.
There are many examples. It occurred with commodities like coffee where an option
developed for fair market coffee, which emphasizes the grower not the coffee companies.
Similarly, campaigns against exploitive labor conditions overseas impacted Nikes
manufacturing of shoes and Wal-Mart's clothing line by Kathy Lee Gifford.
As Brian Fung notes in
Foreign Policy, with smartphones there are similar labor
issues and environmental issues, given the significant amount of carbon emissions
over a phone's life cycle.
Regarding foreign affairs, all smart phones rely on the mineral coltan, whose
heat resistant properties and ability to hold an electrical charge make it essential.
Much of the coltan comes from the Democratic Republic of Congo, where its extraction
and economics is analogous to the highly publicized blood diamonds. Coltan from
the Congo represents one of the worst illustrations of modern mineral exploitation.
With its iPhone, Apple acknowledges the seriousness of the issue but hasn't embraced
an effective response.
Given the source and deprivation behind much of the coltan, what will you do?
Use a device that is a modern necessity? Seek the manufacturer that is socially
and environmentally responsible? Or rely on the marketplace of ideas and products
to change the production of coltan and smartphones?
By William
Vocke
For more information see:
Brian Fung, "The Geopolitics of the iPhone," Foreign Policy, June
28, 2010.
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