Humans Have Visited My Planet in What Fashion

On 24 Apr 2013, the Rana Plaza building in Bangladesh complanate. More than 1,100 people died and another two,500 were injured, making information technology the 4th largest industrial disaster in history.

That's when Fashion Revolution was born.

Rana Plaza was a factory complex in Savar, Bangladesh, making dress for some of the biggest global style brands. About of the v,000 workers within were immature women.

This tragedy was preventable. In the backwash, survivors told stories of how they knew the building was hazardous and showing cracks in the days leading upwards to the plummet. Multiple workers told their supervisors that they were afraid to enter the building and continue working. The retails shops and banks on the ground flooring close down their operations, but the demand of global brands and an clamorous way industry called garment workers back inside. The factories remained open up and these workers fabricated our clothes in fright for their lives.

In the days and weeks before the tragedy, many of these clothes were packed in boxes and shipped to brands and retailers around the earth. The truth is that we bought and wore these garments stitched together in tragedy. And the culpable brands weren't limited to 'fast-fashion', but included mid-price retailers. Their unifying attribute wasn't low cost, merely lack of transparency.

via rijans Flickr CC

Way Revolution is now a global movement of people like you.

We believe that no ane should die for fashion and since the Rana Plaza disaster we've campaigned with citizens, brands and policymakers to demand a fair and condom fashion industry.

Since Fashion Revolution began, people from all over the world have used their voice and their ability to need change from the fashion industry. And it'southward working. The manufacture is starting to heed.

We've seen brands condign more than open up about where their clothes are made and the affect their materials are having on the environment. We've seen manufacturers make their factories safer and more of the people in the supply chain are existence seen and heard. Designers are now considering people and planet when creating new vesture. Citizens are thinking before they buy.

But the story is far from over. Nosotros are merely just getting started. We can't stop until every worker who makes our clothes is seen, heard and paid properly and the environments they alive and work in are rubber. We tin't stop until the culture of consumption is changed and nosotros learn to beloved and appreciate our apparel and the people that made them.

Prototype: Daria Daria

What are the atmospheric condition of the global fashion industry?

Have you always wondered who made your clothes? How much they're paid, and what their lives are like?

Our wearing apparel have gone on a long journey before they accomplish stores and webshops, passing through the hands of cotton farmers, spinners, weavers, dyers, sewers and many more than.

The number of people that piece of work in the global clothing supply chain isn't fully understood, due to the complex web of processes involved. The Ellen MacArthur Foundation estimates that 300 one thousand thousand people work in the clothing industry, with around 25 to lx meg people directly employed. Most of these workers in low-skill and low paid piece of work are immature women. The style industry is a significant correspondent to gender inequality in many forms, with about ane in 3 female garment workers having experienced sexual harassment in the past 12 months. And harassment isn't the only aspect of their piece of work garment workers take to fear. The Garment Worker Diaries project has found that less than half of the workers in their People's republic of bangladesh sample felt safety in their factories and forty% reported seeing a fire in their workplace.

Effectually the earth, the people who brand our clothes predominantly alive in poverty, defective a living wage or the freedom to negotiate for their pay and working conditions. According to the Global Slavery Index (2018), the garment manufacture is the second most predominant sector driving modern slavery.

Style Revolution wants to change this. We must ask #WhoMadeMyClothes? and demand that the people who make our clothes are visible and their human rights are respected.

The volumes of clothing we produce and consume are harmful to people and planet.

Global fashion consumption continues to proceeds speed at unsustainable levels and relies on a culture of disposability. In 2015, we produced effectually 150 billion items of clothing and this number continues to abound. We buy 60% more vesture now than we did xv years agone, and only proceed these garments for half as long.

Around the globe, we produce too much clothing, from unsustainable materials, much of which ends up incinerated or in landfill. In the United kingdom of great britain and northern ireland, nosotros transport 11 million items of clothing to landfill every week.

We must replace our civilization of disposable clothes with a culture of keeping, swapping, repairing and sharing. Inquiry from WRAP has found that extending the life of a garment by ix months would reduce its carbon, h2o and waste footprints by xx-30% each.

The limerick of our clothing is degrading the environment

Our dress are made from materials and processes that require the extraction of natural, non-renewable resources and produce considerable negative ecology impacts. Each of the common materials we wear carries its own set of environmental issues, from the oil extraction required to create polyester, acrylic and nylon to the deforestation for viscose or heavy pesticide use in farming cotton.

Polyester represents around 60% of global fibre production, it is a plastic fibre and is made of crude oil. Every time nosotros launder apparel made from synthetic fibres, they will shed approximately 700,000 individual microplastic fibres. Many of these fibres will reach waterways, harming biodiversity and potentially even compromising harming human wellness.

Nosotros must demand that brands take greater responsibility for environmental stewardship and chemical rubber when it comes to materials. Ask brands #WhatsInMyClothes? And acquire more about some of the key environmental issues in our fanzine 003: Way Environment Change.

TO LEARN More ABOUT THE ISSUES AND SOLUTIONS IN THE FASHION INDSUTRY, READ OUR WHITEPAPER .

© Rachel Manns

Fashion Revolution is a global movement calling for a fair, safe, make clean and transparent fashion industry

We are campaigning for a global fashion industry that conserves and restores the environment and values people over growth and turn a profit.

With systemic and structural change, the global way industry tin lift millions of people out of poverty and provide them with decent and dignified livelihoods. It can conserve and restore our living planet. It tin bring people together and exist a great source of joy, creativity and expression for individuals and communities.

Join the Fashion Revolution:

Citizens

Brands & Retailers

Artisans, makers, farmers & manufactory workers

Educators

Manner manufacture

Merchandise Unions

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