Global Alliance for Sustainable Fashion (GASF)

Global Alliance for Sustainable Fashion (GASF)

is a coalition of organisations that have joined forces to improve the fashion industry’s linked social, ecological, and financial systems. It is a continuous process to bring about change in the product and the various systems of the fashion industry for economic development, ecological integrity, and social justice. The Alliance defines fashion as clothing, leather, and shoes made from textiles and related goods. Promote multi-stakeholder approaches to achieve universal service access. Bring together stakeholders to improve system performance and attract new investment.

The primary objectives of Global Alliance for Sustainable Fashion (GASF) are to:

Promote Ethical Fashion: GASF is committed to promoting ethical and sustainable practices throughout the fashion industry, advocating for fair labor practices, safe working conditions, and responsible sourcing of materials.

Reduce Environmental Impact: The alliance works to reduce the environmental impact of the fashion industry by promoting sustainable production methods, responsible water use, and waste reduction measures.

Support Sustainable Design: GASF encourages sustainable design practices that prioritize durability, longevity, and recyclability in fashion products, reducing the overall environmental footprint of clothing and accessories.

Advocate for Responsible Consumption: The alliance raises awareness about responsible and mindful consumption of fashion items, promoting conscious consumer choices and the importance of extending the lifespan of clothing.

Circular Fashion Economy: GASF advocates for the adoption of circular fashion economy principles, including recycling, upcycling, and clothing resale, to minimize textile waste and maximize resource efficiency.

Fair Trade and Inclusivity: The alliance supports fair trade initiatives within the fashion industry, ensuring that workers, particularly in developing countries, receive fair wages and equitable treatment. GASF also promotes inclusivity and diversity in the fashion sector.

Transparency and Traceability: GASF emphasizes transparency and traceability in fashion supply chains, enabling consumers to make informed choices about the products they buy.

Sustainable Materials: The alliance encourages the use of sustainable and eco-friendly materials in fashion production, such as organic cotton, recycled fabrics, and alternative materials like bamboo and hemp.

Promote Sustainable Fashion Education: GASF promotes education and awareness about sustainable fashion among designers, manufacturers, retailers, and consumers, fostering a deeper understanding of the environmental and social impacts of fashion.

Advocate for Policy Change: The alliance engages in policy advocacy to promote regulations and incentives that support sustainable fashion practices and discourage harmful industry practices.

Collaborate and Share Best Practices: GASF fosters collaboration among fashion brands, designers, NGOs, and governments to share best practices, innovations, and technologies that advance sustainable fashion.

Support Artisanal and Indigenous Fashion: The alliance recognizes and supports the value of artisanal and indigenous fashion traditions, promoting cultural preservation and economic opportunities for artisans.

Through these objectives, GASF aims to transform the fashion industry into a more sustainable, ethical, and environmentally responsible sector that contributes to a circular economy, social equity, and a healthier planet.

It was clear that action at the national level would be required to accomplish the aspirations and pledges. Through effective constituencies, the alliance is dedicated to increase collective advocacy efforts, sharpen the effectiveness of commitments, and ensure that they are linked with countries’ interests and plans.

  • Governments
  • Civil Society Organizations
  • External Support Agencies
  • Private Sector
    • Research & Learning Institutions

We’ve brought different stakeholders together to form an inclusive partnership framework that produces real, collective action at the international level, as well as, increasingly, at the national level.

We acknowledge that a broader range of players, including the commercial sector, research and learning institutions, and civil society organisations, can make substantial contributions to achieve the alliance's objectives.

We’ve significantly enhanced alliance’ interaction with one another, laying the groundwork for development toward a shared vision.

We’re tightening up accountability procedures, and commitments made by governments and donors are starting to find their way into national policies, procedures, and structures.

We’ve moved the conversation away from the global and closer to regions and countries.

We’ve created opportunities for governments and partners to share best practices, resulting in stronger national policies and more inclusive partnership structures and processes.

Stakeholders and people hold each other accountable

  • Across the SDG agenda, high-level conversation mobilises political will for water, sanitation, and hygiene.
  • Multi-stakeholder platforms led by the government drive collaborative action toward meeting commitments.
  • To attract and effectively employ additional capital, investment cases and transparent processes are needed.
  • High-level discourse brings leaders together and connects them to other SDG priorities.
  • Country governance and service delivery systems are supported by a learning network of multi-stakeholder platforms.
  • Better decision-making and analysis are aided by existing and fresh evidence.

The Alliance strategy relies on people who are ready to think, lead, and act outside of their own organisational and sectoral silos, and who have the attitude and convening power to bring all stakeholders together. Individual champions and focal points displaying this bold manner of working should be cultivated and publicly honoured; this is a new strategy that demands active cultivation and continual support from alliance members.

The alliance’s driving element is national engagement; global and regional frameworks support this national participation. The cooperation should evolve and continue to attract additional partners. Such expansion will be an indication of strong collaboration, but it is not a strategic goal in and of itself. A variety of elements, including government leadership, in-country presence of alliance partners, degree of participation of focal points and champions, and Secretariat capacity, will continue to influence the partnership’s ability to engage in each nation.

 

Global Leaders Group HIGH-LEVEL ADVOCACY (High-Level Chair)

Secretariat SUPPORT (Chief Executive Officer)

Steering Committee STRATEGIC LEADERSHIP (Chair of the Steering Committee and Members)

Work Groups ACTION

Partners ACTION (Governments, Civil Society Organizations, External Support Agencies, Private Sector, Research & Learning Institutions )

Delivery structures

The Steering Committee is alliance's highest decision-making body, with representatives from all constituencies. The global leadership group is a high-level group of alliance leaders who fight for and mobilise greater political commitment to the alliance's Guiding Principles and goals. A High-Level Chair leads the Council. The Secretariat assists the Steering Committee in putting the alliance Strategy, roadmaps, and workplans into action. Each alliance constituency should have one focal point in each partner country, whose job it is to increase country-level involvement and coordinate the particular constituency at the national level.

Balance of roles

Political, technical, logistical, advocacy, and strategic functions are all needed to carry out the partnership's agenda. Wherever possible, these functions are laid out in the alliance partnership Results Framework and associated workplans. The goal of the alliance Secretariat is to assist alliance partners in implementing the strategy. All alliance partners share responsibility for the strategy's implementation. The alliance Secretariat and its high-level Chief Executive Officer are well-resourced to ensure that all partners, partnership activities, and governance structures are well-coordinated and supported.

Multi-stakeholder workplans

In accordance with the alliance partnership Results Framework, each entity in the alliance structure shall design its own workplan. The alliance Secretariat will be instrumental in assisting constituencies, regions, and cross-contituency Work Groups in developing these workplans. As outlined in the Results Framework, a similar set of indicators will be used throughout. The Global Leadership Council, the alliance Steering Committee, the secretariat, partners, and constituency groups will all benefit from independent annual partnership health-checks of partnering efficacy.

Learning, review and course correction

High-level management of this approach is provided by the alliance partnership Steering Committee and its two sub-committees, which include annual performance reviews and revisions to the alliance partnership Results Framework. This learning and review process necessitates a robust knowledge management function that draws on evidence of what works and doesn't work in practise, including both quantitative data and contextual narrative, as well as self-reported and third-party inputs. To improve accountability and maintain a focus on course corrections while also finding, discussing, and celebrating successful practises, the process must stay open and transparent.

The Guiding Principles

The values partners have in common and that guide all joint action
 

MULTISTAKEHOLDERS EFFORTS

Multistakeholders efforts are collaborations between businesses, civil society and other stakeholders that seek to address issues of mutual concern, including human rights and sustainability. All hands must be on deck to achieve the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development and the Sustainable Development Goals. It necessitates the collaboration of various sectors and players by pooling financial resources, information, and skills. Cross-sectoral and innovative multi-stakeholder partnerships will play a critical role in getting us to where we need to be by 2030 in our new development era, with 17 intertwined Sustainable Development Goals and 169 associated targets serving as a blueprint for achieving the sustainable Future We Want. Governments, intergovernmental organisations, major groups, and other stakeholders voluntarily undertake multi-stakeholder initiatives for sustainable development, with the goal of contributing to the implementation of intergovernmentally agreed development goals and commitments, as well as the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.

SUSTAINABILITY OF SERVICE AND ACTIONS

It is the practice of reducing your demand for natural resources by making sure that you replace what you use to the best of your ability. It is made up of three pillars: the economy, society, and the environment. We work with businesses to integrate sustainability into every aspect of their operations so they may develop new sources of value and live according to their ideals. Organizations must now demonstrate that they are purposeful about sustainability, hold strong ethical standards, and operate responsibly in everything they do as stakeholders demand more environmental, social, and governance (ESG) efforts, regulations tighten, and consumers increasingly expect brands to take action. Companies and brands are increasingly looking to their partners—as well as technology and innovation—to help them incorporate sustainability and make substantial changes that benefit business, society, and the environment. Now is the time for collaboration—for business to join forces with government and society to reinvent, rebuild, and reshape our global economy so that everyone benefits.

LEAVING NO-ONE BEHIND

The primary, transformative promise of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development and its Sustainable Development Goals is to leave no one behind (LNOB) (SDGs). It expresses all UN Member States' resolve to end poverty in all of its forms, eliminate discrimination and exclusion, and reduce inequities and vulnerabilities that leave people behind and weaken individual and collective potential. The pledge to leave no one behind is a commitment to act explicitly to ensure that those who have been left behind can catch up to those who have experienced greater progress. Extremely impoverished and marginalised groups are sometimes invisible, and as a result, development programmes are frequently disregarded. As a result, individuals who might most benefit from economic improvements brought about by development programmes are left out. But who are these people who are currently being left out of development programmes? And how can we be sure that our own initiatives reach the people who need them the most? These are some of the topics we debate in the Leave No One Behind Platform, along with others.

TRANSPARENCY AND ACCOUNTABILITY

Transparency ensures that information is available that can be used to measure the authorities' performance and to guard against any possible misuse of powers. In that sense, transparency serves to achieve accountability, which means that authorities can be held responsible for their actions.

EVIDENCE-BASED DESICION-MAKING

Evidence-based decision making is a process for making the best decisions possible using the evidence available. It avoids decision making that is based on gut feeling, intuition, or instinct and instead relies on data and facts.

INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATION AND AID EFFECTIVENESS

Ownership: Developing countries are in charge of their own progress. Alignment: Development assistance must be in line with the policies, structures, and procedures of the recipient countries. Harmonization: Development partners of donor nations must coordinate their efforts. Managing for results: Management must be focused on achieving objectives. Mutual accountability: All parties must be held accountable to each other.

Our Partners

Know about our sponsors

Events

Every year on June 27th, Micro, Small and Medium-sized Enterprises (MSMEs) Day is celebrated to honour their role in achieving the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). Small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) account for up to 90% of businesses, 60% to 70% of employment, and they account for half of global GDP, according to the United Nations (UN).
The Global Council for the Promotion of International Trade (GCPIT), in collaboration with the Global Battery Innovation and Recycling Alliance (GBIRA) and the Global Investment Impact Alliance (GIIA), invites you to a day meetup designed to spark powerful international alliances for sustainable impact & investment.
Expired
149
Britain’s Biggest Business Show is back for 2023, returning to the ExCeL in London on the 22nd & 23rd of November! Are you looking to start a business or grow your existing business? Helping small businesses grow and develop, the...
Are you bored with your current career venture? Are you thinking about going it alone but don’t know where to start? The Business Show Miami will give you everything you need to start your dream business. If you are already...
Are you bored with your current career venture? Are you thinking about going it alone but don’t know where to start? The Business Show LA will give you everything you need to start your dream business. If you are already...
Welcome to  The Business Show Singapore, taking place at the Singapore Expo on the 30th & 31st of August 2023. The show will reveal the secrets of business adaptation, innovation, and survival in the business world through finding and purchasing...
Expired

Speakers

Addl.Representative for United Nations Geneva by WFDP
Director Cantier Systems Pte. Ltd
Business development, Green economy and Sustainability Expert
CEO Siyakha Consulting
Chief Sustainability Officer, Evvo Labs Pte Ltd
Director - Surana Group of Companies
Founder at Trayambak & Viadroit
Sales Director, Euroswift
Managing Director, Mo Glory Limited, Nigeria
Founder, HAE Business Solutions Nigeria
Categories
Ads
Ad 2