ABSTRACT

The clothing industry employs 25 million people globally contributing to many livelihoods and the prosperity of communities, to women’s independence, and the establishment of significant infrastructures in poorer countries. Yet the fashion industry is also a significant contributor to the degradation of natural systems, with the associated environmental footprint of clothing high in comparison with other products.

Routledge Handbook of Sustainability and Fashion recognizes the complexity of aligning fashion with sustainability. It explores fashion and sustainability at the levels of products, processes, and paradigms and takes a truly multi-disciplinary approach to critically question and suggest creative responses to issues of:
• Fashion in a post-growth society
• Fashion, diversity and equity
• Fashion, fluidity and balance across natural, social and economic systems

This handbook is a unique resource for a wide range of scholars and students in the social sciences, arts and humanities interested in sustainability and fashion.

chapter |11 pages

Introduction

part I|39 pages

Framing and expanding sustainability and fashion

chapter 1|10 pages

Other Fashion Systems

chapter 2|8 pages

Sustainability and Fashion

chapter 3|10 pages

Nature's Systems

chapter 4|9 pages

A Whole New Cloth

Politics and the fashion system

part II|94 pages

Sustainability and fashion as seen from other places and disciplines

chapter 6|10 pages

Economic Growth and the Shape of Sustainable Fashion

Contextualizing fashion sustainability in terms of consumer-led economic growth

chapter 7|8 pages

Prospect, Seed and Activate

Advancing design for sustainability in fashion

chapter 8|9 pages

Speed

chapter 9|9 pages

African Second-Hand Clothes

Mima-te and the development of sustainable fashion

chapter 11|10 pages

Spirituality and Ethics

Theopraxy 1 in the future of sustainability within the supply chain

chapter 12|10 pages

Consumption Studies

The force of the ordinary

chapter 13|8 pages

Accidentally Sustainable?

Ethnographic approaches to clothing practices

chapter 14|8 pages

The World in a Wardrobe

Expressing notions of care in the economy and everyday life

part III|74 pages

Perspectives on refining fashion from within

chapter 16|11 pages

Branding Sustainability

Business models in search of clarity

chapter 19|10 pages

The New Synthetics

Could synthetic biology lead to sustainable textile manufacturing?

chapter 21|11 pages

Fashion Brands and Workers' Rights

part IV|78 pages

Visions of sustainability from within the fashion space

chapter 22|11 pages

Fashion as Material

chapter 23|9 pages

Fashion Design

chapter 24|10 pages

Fashion and Community

chapter 25|9 pages

Openness

chapter 26|13 pages

Mending

chapter 27|8 pages

‘A Suit, of His Own Earning'

Fashion supremacy and sustainable fashion activism

chapter IV|6 pages

Conclusions