Fashion & Degrowth - Exploring the link between decolonisation and sustainability in fashion
You can’t have climate change without sacrifice zones, and you can’t have sacrifice zones without disposable people, and you can’t have disposable people without racism. (Hop Hopkins)
In August 2020, cultural anthropologist Sandra Niessen published the seminal article: Fashion, its Sacrifice Zone and Sustainability. Using a decolonial perspective, Niessen investigates why and how the clothing systems of the Other have been systematically undervalued and obscured by the fashion system of the Global North, and instead proposes a “revision to the customary framework of sustainability that is being used by dress scholars, environmental activists and policy makers, so that it includes the putative “non-fashion” clothing traditions of the world.”
In Fashion Act Now’s third panel investigating Fashion & Degrowth, Niessen will be in conversation with Extinction Rebellion co-founder Clare Farrell, looking at why an ethical, ecologically aware fashion system must also be a decolonised fashion system.
"Sacrifice zones are resource-rich lands, generally associated with minority communities that are considered dispensable and exploited for economic gain. Rather than expendable physical landscapes, fashion sacrifice zones are dress traditions, and their makers, associated with fashion’s Other half, that are destroyed for and by the expansion of industrial fashion. These zones facilitate industrial expansion because they are a source of cheap labor and also indigenous design (commonly appropriated) important for style change. They also serve as markets when indigenous dress is replaced with industrially produced dress. And finally, they are the major sites of waste disposal, including secondhand clothing (Rodgers 2015)." Sandra Niessen
Racism brought us the climate crisis, and it will take transformative anti-racism to solve it. (Eric Holthaus)
ABOUT FASHION ACT NOW
Fashion Act Now is campaign group calling for environmental justice within the fashion industry. We advocate for decolonisation, just transitions and regenerative practices. Born out of and supporting Extinction Rebellion, we're a team of fashion insiders who believe we need to address the elephant in the room: that the fashion industry in the Global North is too wedded to models of exponential growth and profit to “mark its own homework” any longer.
Through a series of talks, campaigns and workshops, we'll be addressing degrowth and what it means for the fashion industry.
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