As you might suspect from the name, fair trade goods are the game. But, as far as I know this is a for-profit business given that nothing about being a non-profit is on their website that I can find! Some other reviews mentioned it as non-profit though, so maybe it was something a shop assistant told them ("fair non-profit brighton" on google returns no relevant results).
In addition to just generally being an ethical way to shop, what I particularly like is that the service is friendly even when you are just browsing and not purchasing anything, and also that the styles and brands stocked really do change quite a lot with the seasons (as opposed to just having the same fair trade suppliers that make the exact same one dress forever). Their goods are very wearable and much of it is even professional appropriate with none of the stereotypical 'eco-chic' in sight. In addition to mostly clothing for both men and women, they have some jewelry, accessories, and even underwear.
The prices, however, are actually quite high -- ranging from 50 pounds when on 40% sale to 100+ pounds when not -- so I would contest anyone's claim that this store is "affordable" for the majority of people in this country. I agree that fair trade is something for every store in every industry to aspire to, but it's important to remember that this is still a business, not a charity, and there are certainly profit margins involved here. They can afford rent on a very expensive street, and being able to shop at this store is a luxury rather than an obvious ethical choice you could expect people to reasonably undertake. And there are plenty of ethical alternatives for all price ranges -- you could go to a charity shop for much cheaper, to Etsy for handmade clothes from the UK for about the same price, or buy all your clothes cheaply at a big box store and donate the remainder of money you otherwise would have spent at FAIR directly to a charity :) read more