National Consumers League

E289987

The National Consumers League is a historic American advocacy organization founded in 1899 that promotes workers’ rights, fair labor standards, and consumer protection.

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
National Consumers League canonical 3

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (50)

Predicate Object
instanceOf advocacy organization
consumer organization
nonprofit organization
country United States of America
surface form: United States
fieldOfWork child labor reform
consumer rights
financial services consumer issues
food and drug safety
fraud prevention
labor rights
occupational safety and health
public health
telecommunications consumer issues
formerHeadquartersLocation New York City
founded 1899
foundedBy Florence Kelley
Jane Addams
hasAdvocacyTarget United States Congress
surface form: U.S. Congress

federal regulatory agencies
state legislatures
hasKeyPerson Esther Peterson
Florence Kelley
Linda Golodner
Sally Greenberg
hasMethod coalition building
legislative advocacy
litigation
public education campaigns
hasPurpose advocacy for fair wages for children
advocacy for fair wages for women
consumer education
consumer protection
opposition to child labor
promotion of fair labor standards
promotion of maximum working hours laws
promotion of minimum wage laws
promotion of truthful labeling and advertising
promotion of workers’ rights
promotion of workplace safety
public policy advocacy
headquartersLocation Washington, D.C.
legalForm 501(c)(3) organization
notableWork LifeSmarts consumer education program
National Fraud Information Center
White Label campaign
fraud.org
support for Fair Labor Standards Act
support for child labor laws in the United States
operatesInSector nonprofit sector
scopeOfOperation national

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (3)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Florence Kelley memberOf National Consumers League
Brandeis Brief commissionedBy National Consumers League
Muller v. Oregon brief commissionedBy National Consumers League