Sustainability in Fashion and Textiles (eBook, ePUB)
Values, Design, Production and Consumption
Redaktion: Gardetti, Miguel Angel; Torres, Ana Laura
40,95 €
40,95 €
inkl. MwSt.
Sofort per Download lieferbar
20 °P sammeln
40,95 €
Als Download kaufen
40,95 €
inkl. MwSt.
Sofort per Download lieferbar
20 °P sammeln
Jetzt verschenken
Alle Infos zum eBook verschenken
40,95 €
inkl. MwSt.
Sofort per Download lieferbar
Alle Infos zum eBook verschenken
20 °P sammeln
Sustainability in Fashion and Textiles (eBook, ePUB)
Values, Design, Production and Consumption
Redaktion: Gardetti, Miguel Angel; Torres, Ana Laura
- Format: ePub
- Merkliste
- Auf die Merkliste
- Bewerten Bewerten
- Teilen
- Produkt teilen
- Produkterinnerung
- Produkterinnerung

Bitte loggen Sie sich zunächst in Ihr Kundenkonto ein oder registrieren Sie sich bei
bücher.de, um das eBook-Abo tolino select nutzen zu können.
Hier können Sie sich einloggen
Hier können Sie sich einloggen
Sie sind bereits eingeloggt. Klicken Sie auf 2. tolino select Abo, um fortzufahren.

Bitte loggen Sie sich zunächst in Ihr Kundenkonto ein oder registrieren Sie sich bei bücher.de, um das eBook-Abo tolino select nutzen zu können.
The textile industry plays a significant part in the global economy, yet often operates with disregard to its environmental and social impacts. This book takes a wide-ranging look at current analysis of the industry and explores the issues of continuous consumption and increasing disposability.
- Geräte: eReader
- mit Kopierschutz
- eBook Hilfe
- Größe: 5.85MB
Andere Kunden interessierten sich auch für
- Gareth KaneAccelerating Sustainability Using the 80/20 Rule (eBook, ePUB)34,95 €
- Supply Chain Management and Logistics in the Global Fashion Sector (eBook, ePUB)42,95 €
- Rob HarrisonThe Handbook of Ethical Purchasing (eBook, ePUB)34,95 €
- Buying into the Environment (eBook, ePUB)54,95 €
- Roddy MullinShoppernomics (eBook, ePUB)36,95 €
- Young Won ParkBuilding Network Capabilities in Turbulent Competitive Environments (eBook, ePUB)91,95 €
- Accelerating Sustainability in Fashion, Clothing and Textiles (eBook, ePUB)39,95 €
-
-
-
The textile industry plays a significant part in the global economy, yet often operates with disregard to its environmental and social impacts. This book takes a wide-ranging look at current analysis of the industry and explores the issues of continuous consumption and increasing disposability.
Dieser Download kann aus rechtlichen Gründen nur mit Rechnungsadresse in A, B, BG, CY, CZ, D, DK, EW, E, FIN, F, GR, HR, H, IRL, I, LT, L, LR, M, NL, PL, P, R, S, SLO, SK ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis eBooks
- Seitenzahl: 415
- Erscheinungstermin: 8. September 2017
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781351277587
- Artikelnr.: 49261886
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis eBooks
- Seitenzahl: 415
- Erscheinungstermin: 8. September 2017
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781351277587
- Artikelnr.: 49261886
- Herstellerkennzeichnung Die Herstellerinformationen sind derzeit nicht verfügbar.
Gardetti, Miguel Angel; Torres, Ana Laura
I: The systemic vision and the value chain in the textile and fashion industry1. Slow fashion: Tailoring a strategic approach for sustainabilityCarlotta Cataldi
Crystal Grover and Maureen Dickson
Co-founders
Slow Fashion Forward2. Wisdoms from the fashion trenchesLynda Grose
Fashion Design for Sustainability
California College of the Arts
USA3. From principle to practice: Embedding sustainability in clothing supply chain strategiesAlison Ashby
Melanie Hudson Smith and Rory Shand
Plymouth Business School
UK4. Managing chemical risk information: The case of Swedish retailers and Chinese suppliers in textile supply chainsKristin Fransson
Birgit Brunklaus and Sverker Molander
Chalmers University of Technology
SwedenYuntao Zhang
The Fourth Research and Design Engineering Corporation of CNNC
China5. Innovation power of fashion focal companies and participation in sustainability activities in their supply networkHarrie W.M. van Bommel
Saxion University of Applied Sciences
the Netherlands6. Sustainable colour forecasting: The benefits of creating a better colour trend forecasting system for consumers
the fashion industry and the environmentTracy Diane Cassidy
University of Leeds
UK7. Fashioning use: A polemic to provoke pro-environmental garment maintenanceTullia Jack
The University of Melbourne
Australia8. Fashion design education for sustainability practice: Reflections on undergraduate level teachingLynda Grose
California College of the Arts
USA9. Upcycling fashion for mass productionTracy Diane Cassidy
University of Leeds
UKSara Li-Chou Han
Manchester Metropolitan University
UK10. Creating new from that which is discarded: The collaborative San Francisco Tablecloth Repurposing ProjectConnie Ulasewicz and Gail Baugh
San Francisco State University
USAPart II: Marketing
brands and regulatory aspects in the textile and fashion industry11. Sustainable consumption and production patterns in the clothing sector: Is green the new black?Ines Weller
University of Bremen
Germany12. Redefining Made in Australia: A fair go for people and planetCameron Neil and Kirsten Simpson
Net Balance
AustraliaEloise Bishop
Ethical Clothing
Australia13. Sustainability isn't sexy: An exploratory study into luxury fashionIain A. Davies and Carla-Maria Streit
University of Bath
School of Management
UK14. Ethical fashion in Western Europe: A survey of the status quo through the digital communications lensIlaria Pasquinelli and Pamela Ravasio
texSture
UK15. Effectiveness of standard initiatives: Rules and effectiveimplementation of transnational standard initiatives (TSI) in the apparel industry: An empirical examinationClaude Meier
University of Zurich and University of Applied Sciences Zurich (HWZ)
SwitzerlandPart III: The practice in textiles and fashion16. Corporate responsibility in the garment industry: Towards shared valueAnna Larsson
U&We
SwedenKatarina Buhr
IVL Swedish Environmental Research Institute and Linköping University
SwedenCecilia Mark-Herbert
Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
Sweden17. Zigzag or interlock? The case of the Sustainable Apparel CoalitionKim Poldner
University of St Gallen
Switzerland18. Garments without guilt? A case study of sustainable garment sourcing in Sri LankaPatsy Perry
George Davies Centre for Retail Excellence
Heriot-Watt University
UK19. Next one
please: Integrating sustainability criteria in the procurement of operating-room textiles: The case of GermanyEdeltraud Günther
Technische Universität Dresden
GermanyHolger Hoppe
SCHOTT Solar
GermanyGabriel Weber
ENT Environment & Management
SpainJulia Hillmann
Technische Universität Dresden
Germany20. Development and the garment industry: Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana IslandsSarah E. Heidebrecht
Alumna
Kansas State University
USAJoy M. Kozar
Kansas State University
USAPart IV: Consumer: purchase
identity
use and care of clothing and textiles21. Young academic women's clothing practice: Interactions between fast fashion and social expectations in DenmarkCharlotte Louise Jensen and Michael Søgaard Jørgensen
Department of Development and Planning
Aalborg University
Denmark22. Connecting meanings and materials: Identity dynamics in sustainable fashionFernando F. Fachin
HEC Montréal
Canada23. Consumers' attitudes towards sustainable fashion: Clothing usage and disposalHelen Goworek and Alex Hiller
Nottingham Business School
Nottingham Trent University
UKTom Fisher
School of Art and Design
Nottingham Trent University
UKTim Cooper
School of Architecture
Design and the Built Environment
Nottingham Trent University
UKSophie Woodward
School of Social Sciences
University of Manchester
UKIndex
Crystal Grover and Maureen Dickson
Co-founders
Slow Fashion Forward2. Wisdoms from the fashion trenchesLynda Grose
Fashion Design for Sustainability
California College of the Arts
USA3. From principle to practice: Embedding sustainability in clothing supply chain strategiesAlison Ashby
Melanie Hudson Smith and Rory Shand
Plymouth Business School
UK4. Managing chemical risk information: The case of Swedish retailers and Chinese suppliers in textile supply chainsKristin Fransson
Birgit Brunklaus and Sverker Molander
Chalmers University of Technology
SwedenYuntao Zhang
The Fourth Research and Design Engineering Corporation of CNNC
China5. Innovation power of fashion focal companies and participation in sustainability activities in their supply networkHarrie W.M. van Bommel
Saxion University of Applied Sciences
the Netherlands6. Sustainable colour forecasting: The benefits of creating a better colour trend forecasting system for consumers
the fashion industry and the environmentTracy Diane Cassidy
University of Leeds
UK7. Fashioning use: A polemic to provoke pro-environmental garment maintenanceTullia Jack
The University of Melbourne
Australia8. Fashion design education for sustainability practice: Reflections on undergraduate level teachingLynda Grose
California College of the Arts
USA9. Upcycling fashion for mass productionTracy Diane Cassidy
University of Leeds
UKSara Li-Chou Han
Manchester Metropolitan University
UK10. Creating new from that which is discarded: The collaborative San Francisco Tablecloth Repurposing ProjectConnie Ulasewicz and Gail Baugh
San Francisco State University
USAPart II: Marketing
brands and regulatory aspects in the textile and fashion industry11. Sustainable consumption and production patterns in the clothing sector: Is green the new black?Ines Weller
University of Bremen
Germany12. Redefining Made in Australia: A fair go for people and planetCameron Neil and Kirsten Simpson
Net Balance
AustraliaEloise Bishop
Ethical Clothing
Australia13. Sustainability isn't sexy: An exploratory study into luxury fashionIain A. Davies and Carla-Maria Streit
University of Bath
School of Management
UK14. Ethical fashion in Western Europe: A survey of the status quo through the digital communications lensIlaria Pasquinelli and Pamela Ravasio
texSture
UK15. Effectiveness of standard initiatives: Rules and effectiveimplementation of transnational standard initiatives (TSI) in the apparel industry: An empirical examinationClaude Meier
University of Zurich and University of Applied Sciences Zurich (HWZ)
SwitzerlandPart III: The practice in textiles and fashion16. Corporate responsibility in the garment industry: Towards shared valueAnna Larsson
U&We
SwedenKatarina Buhr
IVL Swedish Environmental Research Institute and Linköping University
SwedenCecilia Mark-Herbert
Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
Sweden17. Zigzag or interlock? The case of the Sustainable Apparel CoalitionKim Poldner
University of St Gallen
Switzerland18. Garments without guilt? A case study of sustainable garment sourcing in Sri LankaPatsy Perry
George Davies Centre for Retail Excellence
Heriot-Watt University
UK19. Next one
please: Integrating sustainability criteria in the procurement of operating-room textiles: The case of GermanyEdeltraud Günther
Technische Universität Dresden
GermanyHolger Hoppe
SCHOTT Solar
GermanyGabriel Weber
ENT Environment & Management
SpainJulia Hillmann
Technische Universität Dresden
Germany20. Development and the garment industry: Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana IslandsSarah E. Heidebrecht
Alumna
Kansas State University
USAJoy M. Kozar
Kansas State University
USAPart IV: Consumer: purchase
identity
use and care of clothing and textiles21. Young academic women's clothing practice: Interactions between fast fashion and social expectations in DenmarkCharlotte Louise Jensen and Michael Søgaard Jørgensen
Department of Development and Planning
Aalborg University
Denmark22. Connecting meanings and materials: Identity dynamics in sustainable fashionFernando F. Fachin
HEC Montréal
Canada23. Consumers' attitudes towards sustainable fashion: Clothing usage and disposalHelen Goworek and Alex Hiller
Nottingham Business School
Nottingham Trent University
UKTom Fisher
School of Art and Design
Nottingham Trent University
UKTim Cooper
School of Architecture
Design and the Built Environment
Nottingham Trent University
UKSophie Woodward
School of Social Sciences
University of Manchester
UKIndex
I: The systemic vision and the value chain in the textile and fashion industry1. Slow fashion: Tailoring a strategic approach for sustainabilityCarlotta Cataldi
Crystal Grover and Maureen Dickson
Co-founders
Slow Fashion Forward2. Wisdoms from the fashion trenchesLynda Grose
Fashion Design for Sustainability
California College of the Arts
USA3. From principle to practice: Embedding sustainability in clothing supply chain strategiesAlison Ashby
Melanie Hudson Smith and Rory Shand
Plymouth Business School
UK4. Managing chemical risk information: The case of Swedish retailers and Chinese suppliers in textile supply chainsKristin Fransson
Birgit Brunklaus and Sverker Molander
Chalmers University of Technology
SwedenYuntao Zhang
The Fourth Research and Design Engineering Corporation of CNNC
China5. Innovation power of fashion focal companies and participation in sustainability activities in their supply networkHarrie W.M. van Bommel
Saxion University of Applied Sciences
the Netherlands6. Sustainable colour forecasting: The benefits of creating a better colour trend forecasting system for consumers
the fashion industry and the environmentTracy Diane Cassidy
University of Leeds
UK7. Fashioning use: A polemic to provoke pro-environmental garment maintenanceTullia Jack
The University of Melbourne
Australia8. Fashion design education for sustainability practice: Reflections on undergraduate level teachingLynda Grose
California College of the Arts
USA9. Upcycling fashion for mass productionTracy Diane Cassidy
University of Leeds
UKSara Li-Chou Han
Manchester Metropolitan University
UK10. Creating new from that which is discarded: The collaborative San Francisco Tablecloth Repurposing ProjectConnie Ulasewicz and Gail Baugh
San Francisco State University
USAPart II: Marketing
brands and regulatory aspects in the textile and fashion industry11. Sustainable consumption and production patterns in the clothing sector: Is green the new black?Ines Weller
University of Bremen
Germany12. Redefining Made in Australia: A fair go for people and planetCameron Neil and Kirsten Simpson
Net Balance
AustraliaEloise Bishop
Ethical Clothing
Australia13. Sustainability isn't sexy: An exploratory study into luxury fashionIain A. Davies and Carla-Maria Streit
University of Bath
School of Management
UK14. Ethical fashion in Western Europe: A survey of the status quo through the digital communications lensIlaria Pasquinelli and Pamela Ravasio
texSture
UK15. Effectiveness of standard initiatives: Rules and effectiveimplementation of transnational standard initiatives (TSI) in the apparel industry: An empirical examinationClaude Meier
University of Zurich and University of Applied Sciences Zurich (HWZ)
SwitzerlandPart III: The practice in textiles and fashion16. Corporate responsibility in the garment industry: Towards shared valueAnna Larsson
U&We
SwedenKatarina Buhr
IVL Swedish Environmental Research Institute and Linköping University
SwedenCecilia Mark-Herbert
Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
Sweden17. Zigzag or interlock? The case of the Sustainable Apparel CoalitionKim Poldner
University of St Gallen
Switzerland18. Garments without guilt? A case study of sustainable garment sourcing in Sri LankaPatsy Perry
George Davies Centre for Retail Excellence
Heriot-Watt University
UK19. Next one
please: Integrating sustainability criteria in the procurement of operating-room textiles: The case of GermanyEdeltraud Günther
Technische Universität Dresden
GermanyHolger Hoppe
SCHOTT Solar
GermanyGabriel Weber
ENT Environment & Management
SpainJulia Hillmann
Technische Universität Dresden
Germany20. Development and the garment industry: Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana IslandsSarah E. Heidebrecht
Alumna
Kansas State University
USAJoy M. Kozar
Kansas State University
USAPart IV: Consumer: purchase
identity
use and care of clothing and textiles21. Young academic women's clothing practice: Interactions between fast fashion and social expectations in DenmarkCharlotte Louise Jensen and Michael Søgaard Jørgensen
Department of Development and Planning
Aalborg University
Denmark22. Connecting meanings and materials: Identity dynamics in sustainable fashionFernando F. Fachin
HEC Montréal
Canada23. Consumers' attitudes towards sustainable fashion: Clothing usage and disposalHelen Goworek and Alex Hiller
Nottingham Business School
Nottingham Trent University
UKTom Fisher
School of Art and Design
Nottingham Trent University
UKTim Cooper
School of Architecture
Design and the Built Environment
Nottingham Trent University
UKSophie Woodward
School of Social Sciences
University of Manchester
UKIndex
Crystal Grover and Maureen Dickson
Co-founders
Slow Fashion Forward2. Wisdoms from the fashion trenchesLynda Grose
Fashion Design for Sustainability
California College of the Arts
USA3. From principle to practice: Embedding sustainability in clothing supply chain strategiesAlison Ashby
Melanie Hudson Smith and Rory Shand
Plymouth Business School
UK4. Managing chemical risk information: The case of Swedish retailers and Chinese suppliers in textile supply chainsKristin Fransson
Birgit Brunklaus and Sverker Molander
Chalmers University of Technology
SwedenYuntao Zhang
The Fourth Research and Design Engineering Corporation of CNNC
China5. Innovation power of fashion focal companies and participation in sustainability activities in their supply networkHarrie W.M. van Bommel
Saxion University of Applied Sciences
the Netherlands6. Sustainable colour forecasting: The benefits of creating a better colour trend forecasting system for consumers
the fashion industry and the environmentTracy Diane Cassidy
University of Leeds
UK7. Fashioning use: A polemic to provoke pro-environmental garment maintenanceTullia Jack
The University of Melbourne
Australia8. Fashion design education for sustainability practice: Reflections on undergraduate level teachingLynda Grose
California College of the Arts
USA9. Upcycling fashion for mass productionTracy Diane Cassidy
University of Leeds
UKSara Li-Chou Han
Manchester Metropolitan University
UK10. Creating new from that which is discarded: The collaborative San Francisco Tablecloth Repurposing ProjectConnie Ulasewicz and Gail Baugh
San Francisco State University
USAPart II: Marketing
brands and regulatory aspects in the textile and fashion industry11. Sustainable consumption and production patterns in the clothing sector: Is green the new black?Ines Weller
University of Bremen
Germany12. Redefining Made in Australia: A fair go for people and planetCameron Neil and Kirsten Simpson
Net Balance
AustraliaEloise Bishop
Ethical Clothing
Australia13. Sustainability isn't sexy: An exploratory study into luxury fashionIain A. Davies and Carla-Maria Streit
University of Bath
School of Management
UK14. Ethical fashion in Western Europe: A survey of the status quo through the digital communications lensIlaria Pasquinelli and Pamela Ravasio
texSture
UK15. Effectiveness of standard initiatives: Rules and effectiveimplementation of transnational standard initiatives (TSI) in the apparel industry: An empirical examinationClaude Meier
University of Zurich and University of Applied Sciences Zurich (HWZ)
SwitzerlandPart III: The practice in textiles and fashion16. Corporate responsibility in the garment industry: Towards shared valueAnna Larsson
U&We
SwedenKatarina Buhr
IVL Swedish Environmental Research Institute and Linköping University
SwedenCecilia Mark-Herbert
Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
Sweden17. Zigzag or interlock? The case of the Sustainable Apparel CoalitionKim Poldner
University of St Gallen
Switzerland18. Garments without guilt? A case study of sustainable garment sourcing in Sri LankaPatsy Perry
George Davies Centre for Retail Excellence
Heriot-Watt University
UK19. Next one
please: Integrating sustainability criteria in the procurement of operating-room textiles: The case of GermanyEdeltraud Günther
Technische Universität Dresden
GermanyHolger Hoppe
SCHOTT Solar
GermanyGabriel Weber
ENT Environment & Management
SpainJulia Hillmann
Technische Universität Dresden
Germany20. Development and the garment industry: Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana IslandsSarah E. Heidebrecht
Alumna
Kansas State University
USAJoy M. Kozar
Kansas State University
USAPart IV: Consumer: purchase
identity
use and care of clothing and textiles21. Young academic women's clothing practice: Interactions between fast fashion and social expectations in DenmarkCharlotte Louise Jensen and Michael Søgaard Jørgensen
Department of Development and Planning
Aalborg University
Denmark22. Connecting meanings and materials: Identity dynamics in sustainable fashionFernando F. Fachin
HEC Montréal
Canada23. Consumers' attitudes towards sustainable fashion: Clothing usage and disposalHelen Goworek and Alex Hiller
Nottingham Business School
Nottingham Trent University
UKTom Fisher
School of Art and Design
Nottingham Trent University
UKTim Cooper
School of Architecture
Design and the Built Environment
Nottingham Trent University
UKSophie Woodward
School of Social Sciences
University of Manchester
UKIndex