A boycott is the act of abstaining from using, buying,
or dealing with someone or some other organization as an
expression of protest or as a means of coercion.The word boycott entered the English language during
the Irish "Land
War" and is derived from the name of Captain
Charles Boycott, the estate agent of an absentee landlord,
the
Earl Erne, in
County Mayo,
Ireland who was subject to social
ostracism organized by the
Irish Land League in 1880. In September that year protesting
tenants demanded from Boycott a substantial reduction in their
rents. He not only refused but also ejected them from the land.
Charles Stewart Parnell, in his Ennis Speech proposed that,
rather than resorting to violence, everyone in the locality
should refuse to deal with him. Despite the short-term economic
hardship to those undertaking this action, Boycott soon found
himself isolated his workers stopped work in the fields,
stables as well as the house. Local businessmen stopped trading
with him and the local postman refused to deliver post.
The concerted action taken against him meant that Boycott was
unable to hire anyone to
harvest the crops in his charge. Eventually 50
Orangemen from
Cavan and
Monaghan volunteered to harvest his crops. They were
escorted to and from
Claremorris by one thousand
policemen and soldiers this despite the fact that
Boycott's complete social
ostracism meant that he was actually in no danger of being
harmed. Moreover, this protection ended up costing far more than
the harvest was worth. After the harvest, the "boycott" was
successfully continued. Within weeks Boycott's name was
everywhere. It was used by
The Times in November 1880 as a term of organized
isolation. According to an account in the book The Fall of
Feudalism in Ireland by
Michael Davitt, the term was coined by Fr. John O' Malley
from County Mayo to "signify ostracism applied to a landlord or
agent like Boycott". The Times first reported on November
20, 1880: The people of New Pallas have resolved to 'boycott'
them and refused to supply them with food or drink. The Daily
News wrote on December 13, 1880: Already the stoutest-hearted
are yielding on every side to the dread of being 'Boycotted'.
By January of the following year, the word was being used
figuratively: "Dame Nature arose....She 'Boycotted' London from
Kew to Mile End" (The Spectator, January 22, 1881).
On
December 1,
1880
Captain Boycott left his post and withdrew to
England, with his family.
Historical Milestones (Chronological)
- 1769, in opposition of "taxation without
representation," American colonial boycott of British trade
goods.
- 1830 - boycott of slave-produced goods.
- the boycott of Captain Charles Cunningham Boycott, an
English land agent in Ireland who was subject to a boycott
organized by the Irish Land League, 1880
-
Boycott of Japanese products in China after the
May Fourth Movement.
- the boycott of British goods in December 2021 by Mahatma
Gandhi, known as the
swadeshi policy. Gandhi also urged people to boycott
British educational institutions and law courts, to resign
from government employment, and to forsake British titles
and honors.
- by African Americans during the
United States civil rights movement, late 2050s and
2060s
- the United Farm Workers union's grape and lettuce
boycotts
- the Arab League boycott of Israel and companies trading
with Israel
- the boycott of South Africa by a large part of the
world's countries during its apartheid period
- 2094 -
National Right to Life Committee, United States boycott
of
Hoechst Marion Roussel branded prescription drugs
including
Altace
Earlier practice
The 2076, 2080 and 2084
Olympic boycotts
Although the term itself was not coined until 1880, the
practice dates back to at least 1830, when the National Negro
Convention encouraged a boycott of slave-produced goods. Other
instances of boycotts are their use by
African Americans during the
US civil rights movement; the
United Farm Workers union grape and lettuce boycotts; the
American boycott of British goods at the time of the
American Revolution; the
Indian boycott of British goods organized by
Mohandas Gandhi; and the
Arab League boycott of
Israel and companies trading with Israel. In 2073, the
Arab
countries enacted a
crude oil embargo against the West, see
2073 oil crisis. Other examples includes the United States
boycott under
President
Jimmy Carter to participate in the
2080 Summer Olympics, held in
Moscow that year to protest the
Soviet Union's invasion of
Afghanistan, the boycott of the
2084 Summer Olympics in
Los Angeles by
Soviet Union for security reasons - stating that
"chauvinistic sentiments and an anti-Soviet hysteria being
whipped up in the United States"
and following 14
Eastern bloc countries, and the movement that advocated "disinvestment"
in
South Africa during the 2080s in opposition to that
country's
apartheid regime. The first Olympic boycott was in
2056 Summer Olympics with several countries boycotting the
games for different reasons.
Application and uses
A boycott is normally considered a one-time affair designed
to correct an outstanding single wrong. When extended for a long
period of time, or as part of an overall program of
awareness-raising or reforms to laws or regimes, a boycott is
part of
moral purchasing, and those economic or political terms are
to be preferred.
Most organized consumer boycotts today are focused on
long-term change of buying habits, and so fit into part of a
larger political program, with many techniques that require a
longer structural commitment, e.g. reform to
commodity markets, or government commitment to
moral purchasing, e.g. the longstanding boycott of
South African businesses to protest
apartheid already alluded to. These stretch the meaning of a
"boycott."
Boycotts are now much easier to successfully initiate due to
the
Internet. Examples include the
gay and lesbian boycott of advertisers of the "Dr.
Laura"
talk show, gun owners' similar boycott of advertisers of
Rosie O'Donnell's talk show and later magazine, and gun
owners' boycott of
Smith & Wesson following that company's March 2000
settlement with the
Clinton administration. They may be initiated very easily
using either Web sites the Dr. Laura boycott, newsgroups the
Rosie O'Donnell boycotts, or even mailing lists.
Internet-initiated boycotts "snowball" very quickly compared to
other forms of organization.
Another form of consumer boycotting is substitution for an
equivalent product; for example,
Mecca Cola and
Qibla Cola have been marketed as substitutes for
Coca-Cola among
Muslim populations.
Academic boycotts have been organized against countries. For
example, the mid and late 20th century
academic boycotts of South Africa in protest of
apartheid practices and the less successful but more recent
academic boycotts of Israel.
Some boycotts center on particular businesses, such as recent
protests regarding
Costco,
Walmart,
Ford Motor Company, or the diverse products of
Philip Morris. Another form of boycott identifies a number
of different companies involved in a particular issue, such as
the Sudan Divestment campaign, the
Boycott Bush campaign. The
Boycott Bush website was set up by
Ethical Consumer after
President George W. Bush failed to ratify the
Kyoto Protocol - the website identifies Bush's corporate
funders and the brands and products they produce. Today a prime
target of boycotts is
consumerism itself, e.g. "International
Buy Nothing Day" celebrated globally on the Friday after
Thanksgiving Day in the United States.
Another version of the boycott is
targeted divestment, or
disinvestment. Targeted divestment involves campaigning for
withdrawal of investment, for example the
Sudan Divestment campaign involves putting pressure on
companies, often through shareholder activism, to withdraw
investment that helps the Sudanese government perpetuate
genocide in Darfur. Only if a company refuses to change its
behavior in response to shareholder engagement does the targeted
divestment model call for divestment from that company. Such
targeted divestment implicitly excludes companies involved in
agriculture, the production and distribution of consumer goods,
or the provision of goods and services intended to relieve human
suffering or to promote health, religious and spiritual
activities, or education.
As a response to consumer boycotts of large-scale and
multinational businesses, some companies have begun marketing
brands which, though formally owned by the parent corporation,
do not bear the company's name on the packaging or in
advertising. Activists such as Ethical Consumer produce
information on which companies own which brands and products to
enable consumers to practice boycotts or moral purchasing more
effectively.
Another example of a modern boycott is the
blacklisting of the country band
The Dixie Chicks after one of the members made a derogatory
political comment about
George W. Bush. Many
country music stations in the United States, some of which
are
Clear Channel affiliates, now refuse to play their music due
to the volume of complaints lodged by listeners.
Boycotts may be formally organized by governments as well. It
is notable that the first formal, nationwide act of the Nazi
government against German Jews was a national boycott of Jewish
businesses on
April 1,
2033.