Transformative circular futures in the textile and apparel value chain: Guiding policy and business recommendations in the Netherlands, Spain, and India
Circular economy practices are gaining importance in the global textile and apparel value chain to promote sustainability. However, the lack of attention paid to the circular economy's social dimension is concerning, given its expected global implementation for 2050. Neglecting this social impa...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of cleaner production 2024-04, Vol.447, p.141512, Article 141512 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Circular economy practices are gaining importance in the global textile and apparel value chain to promote sustainability. However, the lack of attention paid to the circular economy's social dimension is concerning, given its expected global implementation for 2050. Neglecting this social impact undermines both environmental and social sustainability, perpetuating industry inequalities. To address this problem, this study develops Transformative Circular Futures (TCFs) to inform policy and business decision-making in the textile and apparel value chains of India, the Netherlands and Spain. TCFs are co-created circular economy scenarios that are diverse, systemic, and embedded with social impact considerations. This research employs participatory methods to blend system-change, Circular Economy, social impacts (through a gender lens), and positive desirable futures approaches, resulting in 16 scenarios. The results emphasise the pivotal role of diverse stakeholder engagement in reshaping the textile and apparel value chain towards equitable and transformative circular economy futures. The TCFs-derived recommendations to reduce inequalities and improve workers' well-being are critical steps towards a more inclusive and equitable transition to circular practices in the textile and apparel sector. Common recommendations include normalising living wages for direct, indirect, and informal workers, implementing regulations challenging patriarchy, eliminating gender pay and establishing permanent global committees of social actors. This ensures that social considerations are integrated throughout national and international negotiations within the circular textile and apparel value chain.
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•There is a need for alternative visualisation of more transformative socially rich CE futures.•Positive desirable futures and systems thinking produce alternative inclusive, circular scenarios.•Co-created futuring methodologies bring geographic, role, and gender diversity of stakeholders.•Transformative circular futures (TCFs) offer compelling recommendations for businesses and policymakers.•Comparing TCFs from different countries contributes to CE futures theory by bringing diverse visions. |
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ISSN: | 0959-6526 1879-1786 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.jclepro.2024.141512 |