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consumer protection
(redirected from Consumer law)

   Also found in: Legal, Wikipedia, Hutchinson 0.01 sec.

consumer protection

Legal framework promoting customer safety and education and providing protection from hazardous or substandard products and from fraud. In the U.S., the Federal Trade Commission (established 1914) and the Food and Drug Administration (established 1927) help ensure consumer protection. Regulations address manufacture and design, advertising, labeling, and sales methods. In 1985 the UN produced its Guidelines for Consumer Protection (updated 1995); they cover consumer safety and product standards and education, providing a framework and a benchmark for governments (particularly of less developed countries) to establish a legal basis for consumer protection. See also consumerism, Ralph Nader.


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In a submission to the Labor Taskforce, the Consumer Law Centre of the ACT noted the 'disturbing practice' of brokers including Maequarie Batik and GE Money offering personal loans of up to $40,000 for health care.
Vanina and Dennis Wilson of Essex, VT, have published an article proposing state licensing of ballet instructors and schools in the Loyola Consumer Law Review (Volume 18, Number 3), Loyola University Chicago School of Law, 312.
A critical report released last year by the National Consumer Law Center asserted that subprime loans have been a primary contributing factor in the increase in foreclosures and "rescue" scams across the country.
 
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