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Fashion. Environment. Justice.

Thank you for answering the Clean Clothes Campaign short questionnaire on fashion, the environment and social justice. Your answers will help shape a climate and environmental action manifesto that supports workers' rights and livelihoods. You can join the deeper conversation in the discussions on the Clean Clothes Campaign participatory manifesto webpages.

* Required fields are marked with an asterisk
  • 1 = Strongly Disagree

  • 2 = Disagree

  • 3 = Neither agree nor disagree / neutral

  • 4 = Agree

  • 5 = Strongly Agree

You may skip any question by selecting 'prefer not to answer'.

1 2 3 4 5 Prefer not to answer
I understand how the climate crisis is affecting garment workers' lives and livelihoods.
Circular fashion models (like recycling, reuse and resale) often overlook workers’ rights.
Environmental harm and workers’ rights violations in fashion have the same root causes.
Poor working conditions and environmental impact of the fashion industry will be solved by people shopping more consciously.
I know how to check the credibility of brands’ claims about environmental impact and working conditions in their supply chains.

  • In fashion, Just Transition is about ensuring justice during and after the change to a low-carbon fashion system that protects and restores nature - and in the context of technological change.

  • Justice means respecting and protecting workers' rights, including a living wage, freedom of association, social protection, health and safety, and freedom from harassment and discrimination.

  • It means that companies are held accountable for damage to people and the environment.

  • It also requires repairing the damage done to workers and their communities, both by the climate crisis and by the transformation to a low-carbon industry that protects and restores nature.

Curious or have more to share? Go to this page to continue the discussion about this definition of Just Transition. https://manifesto.cleanclothes.org/processes/about-just-transition

We know this is a big question and it might be hard to answer. That’s totally okay! We’re just hoping to find out a bit about what you think. We also want to share the themes from Manifesto to get you thinking and maybe even interested to join more of these conversations here https://manifesto.cleanclothes.org/

Uphold workers’ rights to protest and organize.
Build a global movement uniting unions, environmentalists, social activists and youth.
Require all fashion companies to uphold workers’ rights when taking climate action.
Cut overproduction and simultaneously pay workers a living wage.
Hold companies legally and financially accountable for the exploitation of workers and the environment in their supply chains.
Fund universal social protection for garment workers through brand and employer social security contributions.
Support women activists, end gender violence, value care work and redesign fashion on eco-feminist principles.
End all forms of discrimination and ensure all workers have equal rights and a voice in decisions. This includes discrimination based on caste, migrant status, pregnancy, gender, sexuality, religion and race.

You can continue the conversation about making less on these pages: Theme 4 - Safe work, a living wage and no overproduction

Please tell us a bit about yourself

The collection of your name and email address is solely for the purpose of contacting you regarding your responses. This information will not be used for any data analysis related to the research itself and will not be used publicly.

Thank you!

Thank you for your help! Your responses are really valuable to help us strengthen our work defending garment workers’ rights.

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