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Article

5 May 2026

Author:
Rachel Lawler, Clean Clothes Campaign

Global: Clean Clothes Campaign launches manifesto for just fashion with +200 labour unions & orgs

"Clean Clothes Campaign launches manifesto for ‘just fashion’", 5 May 2026

Supported by 234 organisations across Europe and Asia, Clean Clothes Campaign (CCC)’s manifesto imagines a “just fashion system” that puts people before profit.

Called the Fashioning a Just Transition Manifesto, CCC’s document provides a set of principles that it says “must underpin all action” related to the future of fashion...

CCC’s manifesto [also] suggests incremental changes to support the future of fashion...

“Workers, consumers, citizens, rights defenders – the fashion industry is not designed for our well-being. But the Manifesto shows us we have the power, the vision and the imagination to radically transform this industry, so it delivers for all of us.”

Fashioning a Just Transition Manifesto says a just fashion system is one that:

  • provides decent work, a high quality of life and equal rights to all workers along the value chain
  • delivers justice in all its forms – social, economic, gender and climate – now and in the future
  • redistributes wealth into the hands of workers, providing everyone with living wages and universal social protection
  • ensures that the costs of climate adaptation and mitigation are fairly shared
  • invites workers to have a voice in decisions and speak up without fear
  • restores nature and operates within planetary boundaries
  • both reduces excessive product volumes and increases job security
  • holds companies and their executives accountable for any damage they cause
  • embraces new, just ways of growing and processing raw materials, and making, transporting, retailing, recycling and valuing clothing, footwear and accessories.
  • is built through a movement of collective power and global solidarity.

Khalid Mahmood, director at the Labour Education Foundation (LEF), Pakistan, added:

[...]

“For workers in Pakistan, environmental transition cannot be considered just unless it also guarantees decent work, living wages, occupational health and safety, freedom of association, social protection, and meaningful participation of workers in decision-making. The manifesto provides an important framework for ensuring that the costs of transition are not imposed on workers and communities in the Global South but are borne by those who profit most from the industry.”