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A social practices approach to encourage sustainable clothing choices

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posted on 2025-08-02, 11:31 authored by C Saunders, I Griffin, F Hackney, A Barbieri, KJ Hill, J West, J Willett
The literature on sustainable clothing covers five key thematic areas: problems associated with fast fashion; sustainable fibre production; sustainable design protocols; corporate responsibility; sociological and social-psychological understandings; and pro-environmental behavior change. This article interweaves these approaches in a study that assesses the potential of experiential learning in clothes making, mending, and modifying workshops to help generate new social practices. Workshop design drew on the five key thematic areas and purposively provided participants with infrastructures and equipment, facilitators, and peer-to-peer support and dialogue as means to help them collaboratively generate new skills, new senses of meaning, and more sustainable ways of thinking, feeling and acting in relation to clothes. This article reveals that our social practices approach encouraged research participants to positively uptake pro-environmental clothing choices. Thematic qualitative analysis of a small sample of participants’ wardrobe audit interviews, informal discussions, reflective videos and reflective diaries illustrates nuanced and dynamic individual responses to the workshops and other project interventions. Nuances are contingent on factors including styles, creativity, habits, and budgets. We argue that, in order to mainstream the benefits of our approach, it is necessary to normalise approaches to clothing and style that sit outside of, or adjacent to, mainstream fashion including clothes making, mending and modifying practices.

Funding

AH/R000123/1

Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC)

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Rights

© 2024 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)

Submission date

2023-11-28

Notes

This is the final version. Available on open access from MDPI via the DOI in this record Data Availability Statement: The project has an archive of publicly accessible data and researcher toolkits available at: https://s4sproject-exeter.uk/

Journal

Sustainability

Publisher

MDPI

Version

  • Version of Record

Language

en

FCD date

2024-01-31T10:23:35Z

FOA date

2024-02-09T16:23:08Z

Citation

Vol. 16 (3), article 1282

Department

  • Social and Political Sciences, Philosophy, and Anthropology

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