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5.6.16

Youth Fashion Summit & Copenaghen Fashion Summit 2016: #restartfashion

Almost a month already passed by since we came back from the wonderful and challenging experience of the Youth Fashion Summit and Copenhagen Fashion Summit 2016.
Working with my group on SDG 4 & 5 :)
Having grown up with greater awareness of environmental issues than any generation, today's youth represent the single best hope for the implementation of sustainable practices in fashion and the wider society. During Copenhagen Fashion Summit, the more than 100 students from across the globe who took part in this year's Youth Fashion Summit presented their ideas. Milano Fashion Institute was the Italian representative at the Summit. The YFS was organized by Danish Fashion Institute and the Copenhagen School of Design and Technology (KEA) in collaboration with other leading Danish design schools.
On 25 September 2015, the 193 members of the UN General Assembly adopted 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) that will dictate the global development agenda until 2030. The Youth Fashion Summit, held in the two days prior to Copenhagen Fashion Summit, explored how the SDGs can represent opportunities for companies to align their own sustainability goals with broader societal aims.
Prior to the summit, participating students attended seven webinars with various themes ranging from new business models and systemic thinking to CSR communication and slow fashion, enlightening them about various aspects of sustainability – and unsustainability – in the industry.

MFI students at Youth Fashion Summit 2016 - pictures by Gianluca Mazzarolo, GM Creative Studio


I am happy to have contributed to the making of the Youth Fashion Summit Manifesto — 7 Demands for The Fashion Industry, presented at the Copenhagen Fashion Summit, 12 May 2016

1. As a group of CEOs, business and opinion leaders, academics and students, would you be here today without equal access to education? As inheritors of your roles, we demand empowerment and education of workers and consumers.
We realise you are very intelligent and influential. But you are kind of stuck in a system that is not really working anymore. So, we want to present our desired future.
In 2030, the fashion industry will have blended the line between work and education. Government, businesses and media will have created a positive symbiotic partnership that encourages the wellbeing of all it touches. With an online learning platform, we will be able to train employees, allowing them to build their technical and personal skills. It will have a positive effect on employee contentment and overall productivity. This platform will be incentivised by governments and employed by businesses.
Moreover, we believe that education should not just involve the makers but also the wearers. The media has a huge impact and so does technology and innovation!
Government and businesses can, together with the media, educate and cultivate behavioural change amongst consumers through their influence and widespread reach.  This will create a feedback loop that in turn feeds back to the business.
With such an open system, education both within and across cultures will allow empowerment to be possible for all. I hope we have empowered you to join us on this journey!
2. As inheritors of your roles, we demand that the fashion industry takes drastic and immediate action towards implementing closed-loop water systems to ensure that the industry is not dependent on fresh water as a resource.
According to the UN, without immediate action from the fashion industry, clean water will no longer be an accessible resource by 2030 for half of the world’s population.
This is not acceptable. Instead, we imagine a future where the fashion industry is no longer the second biggest water consuming industry. We imagine a world where there is full awareness of the chemicals in our fresh water and their effects on 9 billion people.
We also imagine a drastic shift in how we use and value water, creating a culture that both respects and learns from the value of our resources.
The technology of water recycling is out there, so let us implement it today.
3. As inheritors of your roles, we demand a long-term investment in the well-being of the community as a whole, through: fair wages; improving infrastructure; ensuring food security.
I would like to tell you the story of a man that I am pretty sure you know already. His name? Brunello Cucinelli. Cucinelli is the living proof that creating a corporate culture that encompasses the local community is possible; as a matter of fact, it is happening as we speak — his commitment managed to revitalise an entire Italian village. Now, the community is part of the industry and the industry is part of the community. Working hand in hand and mutually gaining — they have not only increased the quality of the final product but, ultimately, the quality of living.
In this new model that we consider should be the new normal, community and industry thrive together by respecting the hands and hearts involved in the garment's life cycle.
4. What do capital, profit and success mean to you? What if, by 2030, they meant something completely different? As inheritors of your roles, we demand you all to collaborate as active investors in a fashion industry where capital, profit and success are redefined and measured in more than monetary value.
By 2030, these concepts must be measured side-by-side with a holistic view of wellbeing, social security and global health.
The priority must be on collaboration, on knowledge sharing, on rethinking where we place our value and a lowering of the barriers between people, companies and countries which halt the flow of progress.
We want you to imagine a future wherein success can be measured not just through financial gains, but equally through the sharing and increasing of knowledge, technological innovation and social and environmental progress.
5. As inheritors of your roles, we demand that by 2030 fashion is no longer the second-largest polluting industry in the world.
You — global policy makers — must work together with NGOs, brands and corporations to create and implement legislation for no more land abuse. Invest in research and innovation.
It is vital that we take responsibility in restoring the air, water and land that we have altered.
Furthermore, we must create more opportunities for life. To let this world flourish, we must stop taking that which we cannot restore.
We are running out of resources.
6. As the next generation and inheritors of your roles, and our waste, we demand that designers, brands and governments collaboratively invest in the recycling technology and infrastructure that is needed to secure and enable a circular system. 
Products, fabrics and fibres will be infinitely cycled within and across industries. Today’s textile waste is tomorrows textile resource.
We support the concept of mass balance and ask that brands give as much into the system as they take out. This encompasses the continual sourcing of recycled content and active collection of textiles. Government must support this through incentives and regulations, so that early adopters benefit from circular behaviour.
We want an industry that has zero waste practices embedded in its DNA and causes no unnecessary harm. This means a strategic cross-industry roadmap to eliminate post-industrial, pre-consumer and post-consumer waste.
We also demand that brands proactively support the system, by incorporating design for circularity as a driving philosophy in their work.
Our vision is a fashion world in 2030, where circularity is business as usual.
7. As inheritors of your roles, we demand economic consequences in order to reverse standards.
We need to reverse the profitability of being unsustainable. Sustainability should be rewarded. This is why we are addressing you, the companies, the governments, the game changers of tomorrow.
The world happiness report validates the notion that happiness does not increase with financial exponential growth. For this reason, our industry needs to look at other metrics of success.
We need to build a resilient infrastructure in order to create green cities.
In short, we are going to penalise reckless businesses and invest that money in sustainable fashion initiatives.
Through this, sustainability will be the standard in 2030. No one wants to be labelled as something negative, but in the future we want to expose the ones that are. Sustainability is the norm.
Our industry has to reward the people that are making a change.
The results of the YFS have been shared during the Copenhagen Fashion Summit on the main stage.


The theme of Copenhagen Fashion Summit 2016 was ‘responsible innovation’. Major sustainability challenges face us all and it is thereby immensely important for the fashion industry to continuously develop and improve the way it functions. 
To overcome these challenges, we need new solutions and new business models. With emphasis on responsible innovation Copenhagen Fashion Summit aimed to be a catalyst for change. 
In May 2016 Copenhagen gathered key players from the global fashion industry, who shared their knowledge and ideas on new and sustainable solutions, the hope is to inspire, motivate, and give tools to implement a sustainable mindset and create a brighter future for the fashion industry. 
MFI students with Renzo Rosso
MFI students with Marco Lucietti, Global Marketing Director ISKO
MFI speakers at CFS with Amber Valletta
MFI speakers at CFS with me :)
MFI students with Suzy Menkes
MFI students with Imran Amed, Business of Fashion 
MFI students & me at CFS
MFI students at CFS
Carlo Capasa at CFS 2016

The Youth Fashion Summit has been reported by The Business of Fashion as follows:

YFS students on main stage




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