Sustainable fashion is a term describing products, processes, activities, and actors aiming to achieve a carbon-neutral fashion industry, built on equality, social justice, animal welfare, and ecological integrity.
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Sustainable fashion is a term describing products, processes, activities, and actors aiming to achieve a carbon-neutral fashion industry, built on equality, social justice, animal welfare, and ecological integrity.
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The sustainable movement looks to combat the large carbon footprint that fast fashion has created by reducing the environmental impact of fashion such as air pollution, water pollution and overall climate change.
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Origin of sustainable fashion movement is intertwined with the modern environmental movement, with the publication in 1962 of the book Silent Spring by American biologist Rachel Carson.
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Principles of 'green' or 'eco' Sustainable fashion, was based on the philosophy of the deep ecologists Arne Næss, Fritjof Capra, and Ernest Callenbach, and design theorist Victor Papanek.
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In parallel with industry, research around sustainable fashion has been in development since the early 1990s, with the field now having its own history, dynamics, politics, practices, sub-movements and evolution of analytical and critical language.
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Adherents of the sustainable fashion movement believe that the fashion industry has a clear opportunity to act differently, pursuing profit and growth while creating new value and deeper wealth for society and therefore for the world economy.
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The goal of sustainable fashion is to create flourishing ecosystems and communities through its activity.
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Frequently concern of those working in the area of sustainable fashion is whether the field itself is an oxymoron.
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The apparent paradox dissolves if Sustainable fashion is seen more broadly, as a process not only aligned to expansionist business models and consumption, but instead as mechanism that leads to more engaged ways of living.
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Fast Sustainable fashion has negative effects on the environment and is unethical in terms of production.
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Exploitative fast Sustainable fashion production is prevalent in countries like China, Bangladesh and Vietnam.
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Hard labor was always around in the Sustainable fashion industry dating back to when slave labor helped factories gather their materials.
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Slow Sustainable fashion can be seen as an alternative approach against fast Sustainable fashion, based on principles of the slow food movement.
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Categorically, slow Sustainable fashion is neither business-as-usual nor just involving design classics.
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Slow Sustainable fashion is a vision of the Sustainable fashion sector built from a different starting point.
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Slow Sustainable fashion is a Sustainable fashion concept that reflects a perspective, which respects human living conditions, biological, cultural diversity and scarce global resources and creates unique, personalized products.
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For end-users, slow Sustainable fashion means that the goods are designed and manufactured with greater care and high-quality products.
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New ideas and product innovations are constantly redefining slow Sustainable fashion, so using a static, single definition would ignore the evolving nature of the concept.
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Concept of slow Sustainable fashion is however not without its controversies, as the imperative of slowness is a mandate emerging from a position of privilege.
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Environmental impact of Sustainable fashion depends on how much and how long a garment is used.
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Textiles and Sustainable fashion industries are amongst the leading industries that affect the environment negatively.
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However, fast, and thus disposable, Sustainable fashion adds to pollution and generates environmental hazards, in production, use, and disposal.
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The report analyses the current production model across the Sustainable fashion industry is dependent on massive fossil-fuel extraction to fuel the production of fibers.
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Environmental impact of Sustainable fashion affects communities located close to production sites.
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Social costs of fast Sustainable fashion are left on the laborers working long hours to mass produce the clothing.
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The high place of several fast Sustainable fashion retailers caused controversy regarding the parameters used for such rankings.
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At the heart of the controversy concerning "fast fashion" lies the acknowledgment that the "problem" of unsustainable fashion is that cheap, accessible, and on-trend clothes have become available to people of poorer means.
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Economic concerns of fashion mean many of the sustainable solutions to fashion, such as buying high-quality goods to last longer, are not accessible to people with fewer means.
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Distribution of value within the Sustainable fashion industry is another economic concern, with garment workers and textile farmers and workers receiving low wages and prices.
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The popular terminology around circular Sustainable fashion, reached the mainstream through a report that has come to define the field, the 2017 "A New Textile Economy: Redesigning Fashion's Future" by the Ellen MacArthur Foundation.
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Up until now, most companies contributing to circular Sustainable fashion are either mechanical or chemical textile recyclers such as Lenzing, Recover Textile Systems, Renewcell, Evrnu, Spinnova or Infinited Fiber Company.
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Sustainable fashion clothing refers to fabrics derived from eco-friendly resources, such as sustainably grown fiber crops or recycled materials.
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Upcycling in Sustainable fashion signifies the process of reusing the unwanted and discarded materials into new materials or products without compromising the value and the quality of the used material.
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Advantages of circular Sustainable fashion include: reduced dependency on imported raw materials, creation of eco- friendly industries and jobs, eco-friendly brands benefit from a better public image, and reduction in environmental damage caused by resource extraction.
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One such approach concerns emotionally durable design, yet with Sustainable fashion's dependency on continuous updates, and consumer's desire to follow trends, there is a significant challenge to make garments last long through emotional attachment.
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Zero waste design in Sustainable fashion is a concept that aims to reduce material waste throughout the textile and Sustainable fashion production process.
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On May 3,2012, the world's largest summit on fashion sustainability was held in Copenhagen, gathering more than 1,000 key stakeholders in the industry to discuss the importance of making the fashion industry sustainable.
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In 2019, the UK Parliament's Environment Audit Committee published a report and recommendations on the future of fashion sustainability, suggesting wide-ranging systemic change, not least government regulation and tax-incentives for sustainable practices, such as lowered VAT for repair services.
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