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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.

3 - Green and social washing

Use this space to discuss theme 3

About this process

Yes to green and just fashion; no to greenwashed factories harbouring exploitation.

💬 Discussions & Ideas

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See all discussions and ideas

Should government check the claims fashion brands and manufacturers make about workers’ rights and the environment? If so, how?

Fashion brands love to sell themselves as 'green' and 'ethical'. But are they really? Should government sanction them when their claims are inflated?

We should slow down and/or redirect fashion marketing

Ban manipulative marketing fostering impulsive buys. Restrict fast Fashion marketing. Support communication and awareness raising on repair, long use, value...

What innovative instruments (legal or other) can you imagine to strengthen workers' and consumers' ability to challenge false claims about workers’ rights or the environment?

Use the space to discuss this question.

Should government check the sustainability claims fashion brands make? And how?

Fashion brands love to sell themselves as 'green'. But are they really? Should government sanction them when their claims are inflated?

What can be done to make sure that the new wave of repair, reuse and recycling (circular economy) initiatives truly address workers’ rights and the environmental harm?

Use this space to discuss this question.

How do you challenge brands and manufacturers that make environmental claims but keep exploiting their workers?

Brands often make bold claims about their environmental impact, but they fail to disclose how poorly they pay workers or treat the environment. How do you challenge their claims? Do you research the brand's history and question their bold claims?

Related processes

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Reference: CC-PART-2025-04-4

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