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El. knyga: Dirty Side of the Garment Industry: Fast Fashion and Its Negative Impact on Environment and Society [Taylor & Francis e-book]

  • Formatas: 236 pages, 4 Illustrations, black and white
  • Išleidimo metai: 30-Sep-2021
  • Leidėjas: CRC Press
  • ISBN-13: 9780429257629
  • Taylor & Francis e-book
  • Kaina: 96,94 €*
  • * this price gives unlimited concurrent access for unlimited time
  • Standartinė kaina: 138,48 €
  • Sutaupote 30%
  • Formatas: 236 pages, 4 Illustrations, black and white
  • Išleidimo metai: 30-Sep-2021
  • Leidėjas: CRC Press
  • ISBN-13: 9780429257629

When thinking about lowering or changing consumption to lower carbon footprints, the obvious offenders come easily to mind: petroleum and petroleum products, paper and plastic, even food. But not clothes. Although the clothing industry is the second largest polluter after agriculture, most consumers do not think of clothes as a source of environmental damage. The Dirty Side of the Garment Industry: Fast Fashion and its Negative Impact on Environment and Society exposes how clever marketing tactics designed to increase demand skillfully hide this reality.



An in-depth examination of the international fashion trade and related goods, this book raises visibility of the ethical aspects of promoting overconsumption through explaining the ecological damage resulting from the high rate of discarding old clothes. It focuses on the promotion, globalization, and integration of the apparel sector into our social and political landscape. It presents an expert overview of the garment industry, highlighting the harsh realities of the environmental and labor problems associated with it. It tracks the commercial and cultural factors that have led to the growth of fast fashion retail and its dominance of the entire industry.



The book covers current regulatory policies, both national and international, on production and labor, and the author does not shy away from making recommendations for change. He examines marketing, business, and economic models to explain how assumptions of traditional economic theory on industrial growth and prosperity fall short in addressing the high social costs of promoting the overconsumption of cheap and readily disposable clothes. You will come away with a detailed, holistic understanding of the garment industry as well as clarity regarding the larger issue of finding balance when it comes to the ethics of consumption.



The textile industry is currently one of the biggest industries practicing labor violations and use of environmentally hazardous processes. This book presents an expert overview of the garment industry, highlighting the harsh realities of the environmental and labor problems that are associated with it. The book covers current regulatory policie

Acknowledgments vii
Introduction ix
Author xiii
Chapter 1 From Fashion to Fast Fashion
1(20)
A New Way to Create Trends
1(3)
Teaching versus Listening to the Customer: Building the Foundations of Manipulation
4(5)
Global Brand Proliferation
9(4)
Fast-Fashion Retail
13(8)
Chapter 2 The Promotion of a Lifestyle
21(16)
Advertising Behavior, Not Product
21(5)
Global Branding
26(5)
Global Taste and Preference Convergence
31(6)
Chapter 3 The Production Platforms of Modern Garment Manufacturing
37(20)
Industry Agglomeration
37(9)
Changing Supply Chains
46(3)
Retailer-Driven Business Model
49(8)
Chapter 4 Regulatory Environment
57(20)
Deregulating the International Trade in Clothes
57(9)
Policy Winners and Losers
66(7)
Recuperating Regulatory Losses through Environmental Sourcing
73(4)
Chapter 5 The Carbon Footprint of Textile Manufacturing for Fast Fashion
77(32)
The Ecological Impact of Fiber Production and Supply
77(4)
King Cotton: The Economic Power of Cotton Producers
81(7)
Exporting Cotton = Exporting Pollution
88(16)
Existing in Isolation in the Production Chain?
104(5)
Chapter 6 The Direct and Social Costs of Low Prices
109(24)
The Social Cost of Firm Profitability
109(8)
Understanding Customer Utility
117(4)
Theoretical Implications for Economic Analysis: Elastic Choice but Inelastic Sales
121(12)
Chapter 7 The Economics, Demographics, and Ethics of the Low Price Quest
133(36)
The Industrial Psychology of Impulses
133(5)
The Moral Universe of Nonwage Earners
138(7)
The Elasticity of Dirty Consumption
145(11)
Utility, Ethics, and the Quest for Sustainability in Fashion Commerce: Not While Prices Are Falling
156(13)
Chapter 8 Implications and Conclusions
169(18)
The Economic Reasons for Ignoring Social Costs
169(6)
Social Costs and Perverse Incentives in Fashion Economics
175(5)
Telling the Hard Truth: Why Extant Solution Recommendations Are Ignored
180(7)
Epilogue 187(2)
References 189(20)
Index 209
Nikolay Anguelov is a professor of economic development in the Department of Public Policy at the University of Massachusetts, Dartmouth. He oversees the graduate certificate and concentration in Public Management for the Master of Public Policy (MPP) program as well as service the research-intensive policy analysis curriculum for the department. Dr. Anguelov is an interdisciplinary scholar whose work focuses on the adjacencies between economics, politics and diplomacy. His research focus is a product of his private sector experience in international trade. As an alumnus of the Fashion Institute of Technology, Dr. Anguelov started his career in the private sector of fashion and home product international commerce where he eventually started his own successful business. Those experiences define his attention to the role policy plays in creating economic incentives both domestically and internationally. Dr. Anguelov is also the author Policy and Political Theory In Trade Practice: Multinational Corporations and Global Governments (2014) and Economic Sanctions Vs. Soft Power: Lessons From Myanmar, North Korea and the Middle East (2015) both published by Palgrave Macmillan.