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This paper examines the relationship between international trade rules and the development of two countries, Ethiopia and Peru, for two products, textiles and coffee, to determine whether trade rules are unfair to producers. It reviews the quota regimes for regulating trade in these sectors, the Multifiber Agreement/Agreement on Textiles and Clothing, and the International Coffee Agreement, respectively. The new regimes delegate significant authority to the private sector, which has developed standards for products and supply chains and governance structures. "Fair Trade" activity as an alternative "system" of trade is motivated by different objectives but also promulgates standards. Both sources of standards may create barriers to trade. The experiences of Ethiopia and Peru in these sectors are reviewed in order to identify strengths and weaknesses, and to identify any constraints on trade resulting from international trade rules. It is concluded that more important than trade rules have been their trade capacities and national government policies. The paper then turns to two contexts in which developing countries may not receive fair treatment from the WTO. The first is the threat to Fair Trade activity posed by the WTO's rules regarding processes and production methods. The other is the international protection of intellectual property rights relevant to coffee and textile-based handicrafts. Geographical Indications protection in the case of coffee is examined to determine whether producing countries are being short changed. The other issue is the protection of textile designs as traditional cultural expressions. It is concluded that Fair Trade standards probably do not constitute PPMs and that a successful WTO challenge is extremely unlikely. While there is a difference in level of Geographical Indications protection for non-wine and spirits products, there is no evidence that the basic level has been inadequate or that additional protection would benefit developing countries. Given the difficulty of identifying the cultural origins of designs, and the uncertain protection available both internationally and in domestic legal systems, and that developed country designs (even when trademarked) are difficult to protect, it is concluded that the traditional cultural expression approach is of limited promise. Finally, Fair Trade is critically examined in theory and operation as a model for trade to benefit developing country producers. It is concluded that Fair Trade does have limited potential to benefit developing country producers. Fair Trade strategies in the coffee and textiles trade are then proposed, highlighting the importance of developing relationships with consumers and retail markets, and upgrading supply chain management.
1,268,565 in 2012 with growth rates of 0.4% p.a during 2008-2012
Corporate Governance, 2013
Purpose -This paper analyses the sustainability-oriented transformation of industries from the lens of sustainable entrepreneurship. The authors investigate the co-evolution between pioneers introducing radically more sustainable offerings and (mostly large) market leaders with their responses. While sustainability pioneers introduce new products in niche markets, incumbents advance them into the mass market, together leading to the transformation of industries, markets and consumer habits.
This paper investigates the effect of supply chain practices on lead time in textile and apparel industry in Kenya. Specifically, the study focused on four supply chain practices i.e. modularity based manufacturing, supply chain integration, supply chain relationship management and supply chain responsiveness. The study targeted all the 59 textile firms in Kenya, with one key informant selected from each firm was selected purposively based on their knowledge of the performance measures the firms use. The findings revealed that modularity based manufacturing, supply chain relationship management and supply chain responsiveness have a negative and significant relationship with lead time. Further the results also showed that supply chain integration has non-significant and positive relationship with lead time. The study highlight the importance of supply chain responsiveness, modularity manufacturing and supply relationship management on reducing lead times. The study recommends that textile firms adopt modularity based manufacturing, supply relationship management and supply chain responsiveness as a way of reducing lead time.
Sustainability is significantly important for fashion business due to consumers' increasing awareness of environment. When a fashion company aims to promote sustainability, the main linkage is to develop a sustainable supply chain. This paper contributes to current knowledge of sustainable supply chain in the textile and clothing industry. We first depict the structure of sustainable fashion supply chain including eco-material preparation, sustainable manufacturing, green distribution, green retailing, and ethical consumers based on the extant literature. We study the case of the Swedish fast fashion company, H&M, which has constructed its sustainable supply chain in developing eco-materials, providing safety training, monitoring sustainable manufacturing, reducing carbon emission in distribution, and promoting eco-fashion. Moreover, based on the secondary data and analysis, we learn the lessons of H&M's sustainable fashion supply chain from the country perspective: (1) the H&M's sourcing managers may be more likely to select suppliers in the countries with lower degrees of human wellbeing; (2) the H&M's supply chain manager may set a higher level of inventory in a country with a higher human wellbeing; and (3) the H&M CEO may consider the degrees of human wellbeing and economic wellbeing, instead of environmental wellbeing when launching the online shopping channel in a specific country.
The aim of the research study is to carve sustainable business strategies for the fashion communities in Ethiopia and Ukraine which are suffering today due to ever-increasing share of fast fashion consumerism. Fashion houses and international brands propagandize sustainability and consumption for better consumer base, where as originally sustainable local-based craftsmen still stay in the shade. Four communities/local designers are selected from the countries through the method of purposive sampling. Qualitative analysis is the basis of the research as we performed personal interviews and in-depth analysis of the communities to diagnose the problems and subsequently devise the solutions. In this research, we have studied and analyzed the problems faced by hereditary communities and ethnic designers in small and medium scale enterprise sector from two emerging economies. After the grounding the difficulties faced we advised strategies for sustainable future growth to the companies. The current academic literature on small and medium scale enterprises highlights the problems and solutions for general industry sectors. This paper brings attention to fashion communities and designers who promote national heritage and are struggling to survive in emerging economies due to indus-trialization and globalization. Moreover the comparison of the two geographies is unique in nature.
International Journal of Integrated Supply Management, 2010
Considering the important role of apparel manufacturers within the global chain, we conduct a research on the Bangladesh garments industry and focus on several important supply chain operational issues. The objectives are to analyse apparel supply chain matters such as new orders, raw materials supply, production processes and logistics related to finished goods delivery. We collect data for trade statistics, conduct structured interviews and send survey questionnaires to garment manufacturers. Analysis shows apparel manufacturers are striving for sustainable business growth. Manufacturers are working towards minimising longer lead time and focus more on issues such as environmental friendly manufacturing, child labour and health and safety in the workplace. We identify related supply chain practices influencing the industry, set guidelines for improvement and offer recommendations for sustainability.
Purpose -The purpose of this paper is to analyse environmental responsibility of companies from industrialized countries when they source materials and products in countries with less environmental protection. Design/methodology/approach -The paper is a study of corporate environmental management in the Danish textile and clothing sector, with 13 cases based on interviews and material from reports and websites. The criteria for choosing the cases were variety of size and market segment, and a mixture of companies that take environmental initiatives and companies for which it was not known whether they take environmental initiatives. Findings -Several different environmental practices were identified: some companies were early which got sustained initiatives, and some early and not sustained initiatives; some companies were late with sustained initiatives, and some late and not sustained initiatives; and finally, some have a practice without environmental initiatives. Dominating types of initiatives are cleaner technology, environmental management systems and cleaner products. Driving forces are governmental regulation, customer demands, market expectations and protection of corporate brands. Some companies focus on capacity building at the suppliers in developing countries, while other companies seem to focus the complex activities at domestic suppliers. Two new facilitating actors in environmental management in product chains were identified.
2022
Today, Open Source Intelligence (OSINT), i.e. information derived from publicly available sources, makes up between 80 and 90 per cent of all intelligence activities carried out by Law Enforcement Agencies (LEAs) and intelligence services in the West. Developments in data mining, machine learning, visual forensics and, most importantly, the growing computing power available for commercial use, have enabled OSINT practitioners to speed up, and sometimes even automate, intelligence collection and analysis, obtaining more accurate results more quickly. As the infosphere expands to accommodate everincreasing online presence, so does the pool of actionable OSINT. These developments raise important concerns in terms of governance, ethical, legal, and social implications (GELSI). New and crucial oversight concerns emerge alongside standard privacy concerns, as some of the more advanced data analysis tools require little to no supervision. This article offers a systematic review of the relevant literature. It analyses 571 publications to assess the current state of the literature on the use of AIpowered OSINT (and the development of OSINT software) as it relates to the GELSI framework, highlighting potential gaps and suggesting new research directions.
Édition La Dondaine, Medium.com, 2024
Actas del I Encuentro Nacional de Arte Rupestre, 2022
Kunst :: Wissenschaft, 2019
Cognition and Instruction, 2000
International Journal of Scientific Research and Engineering Development, 2024
Transfusion Medicine Reviews, 2020
Longos dias têm cem anos: com Agustina Bessa-Luís, 2023
Lab on a chip, 2017
Texto & Contexto - Enfermagem
Yeo'seong yeon'gu, 2019