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A participatory process is a sequence of participatory activities (e.g. first filling out a survey, then making proposals, discussing them in face-to-face or virtual meetings, and finally prioritizing them) with the aim of defining and making a decision on a specific topic.

Examples of participatory processes are: a process of electing committee members (where candidatures are first presented, then debated and finally a candidacy is chosen), participatory budgets (where proposals are made, valued economically and voted on with the money available), a strategic planning process, the collaborative drafting of a regulation or norm, the design of an urban space or the production of a public policy plan.

4 - Safe work, a living wage and no overproduction

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About this process

A just transition means decent work, decent pay and decent working hours - no overtime, no overproduction

💬 Discussions & Ideas

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Ist das Framing dieses Themas logisch und überzeugend?

Die Teilnehmenden der Faircademy-Schulungsreihe 2024/2025 in Deutschland kommentierten den Textentwurf. Die Frage ergibt sich aus den Rückmeldungen. Vgl. auch Diskussion zu gid://decidim-saas/Decidim::Hashtag/2/3.

How do we address the economic inequality between the people that own fashion companies and everyone else that works in fashion?

Use this space to answer this question.

Overproduction

Comment from member of Degrowth collective, Czech republic: Does "no overproduction" also mean restrictions on advertising or higher taxation? Introduction of a luxury tax on expensive brands for example?

THEME 4 - Notes from the workshop with workers and trade union representatives from Serbia

Workers across different factories describe remarkably similar problems: chronic miscommunication with management, production norms set according to the fastest rather than the average worker, outdated machinery, and extreme temperatures that regularly threaten health and safety. The pressure to mee…

We make too many clothes for the planet to cope with, at the cost of long working hours, indecent jobs, poverty wages, sweatshops. Why is this happening? What needs to change?

While the amount of clothes the system produces keeps increasing, most workers are not yet paid a living wage and continue working in an unsafe conditions. What changes do we need in the industry to fix the system?

How has the changing climate affected your work or home life?

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Related processes

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Reference: CCC-PART-2025-04-10

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