We need a Fashion Watchdog

The way many large UK fashion brands buy clothing dumps inappropriate, unexpected and excessive risks and costs onto their supplier factories and undermines smaller fashion brands.

Their actions causes job losses, poverty wages, excessive overtime and unsafe conditions for the people who make our clothes. A Fashion Watchdog could make brands pay what they owe, on time and in full.

MPs who support a fashion watchdog

Before the general election almost 10% of MPs supported a fashion watchdog. A fair number of those supporters are no longer MPs. We will update the list of supportive MPs soon.

Why we need a fashion watchdog

In Bangladesh

In 2021, a research team led by the University of Aberdeen, in collaboration with partners in Bangladesh, undertook projects to investigate the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic on the garment industry in Bangladesh. Between 2020-2021 interviews were conducted with garment workers, trade union representatives, domestic and international NGOs and factory representatives.

Here’s what they found:

In Cambodia

The research in Cambodia has been carried out as part of the Refashion study and the data below comes from a survey of 203 female garment workers in Cambodia undertaken by University of Nottingham, Royal Holloway, University of London and the Cambodia Development Resource Institute.

The research shows: