Exchange to Change | September 2015 | Page 19

Many organizations, activists and celebrities are nowadays criticizing fast fashion and what it stands for, calling for the establishment of an alternative: fair fashion. Just to name a couple of initiatives shedding light on the fashion world: The Fashion Revolution (you might remember its 2-euro-T-shirt social experiment going viral); the Clean Clothes Campaign; the Fair Wear Foundation; the documentary True Cost; the Fair Fashion Fest that was hosted in Ghent earlier this year; and in a more comic way, even the Last Week Tonight show addressed the issue. With each new Primark-dump store opening up, more people are starting to question who made their clothes. Fair fashion was also a topic at IOB's Birthday Conference, where a Fair Fashion Roundtable was organized, moderated by prof. dr. Annick Schramme of the Antwerp Management School. Anne de Leeuw of the University of Amsterdam shared the findings of her research on the effects of labour conditions on the agency of Bangladeshi garment workers. Finally, two practitioners shared their own fair fashion experiences: IOB-alumna Imke Verburg, founder of One Dress for All, a project involving 100 Sri Lankan women in good labour conditions, allowing them ownership of the production process and decision-making power over the use of the project's profit; and Juree Siangsuwan, designer and founder of JSOT's HumanHeritage who aims to produce handmade, durable and sustainable products that last a lifetime. Through this article, Exchange to Change wants to o