Fashion industry sustainability and the role of local production
This study stated the objective of answering the question of how sustainability applies to local fashion production and to explain the connection between global fashion industries and fast fashion business to the sustainability fashion products. From the literature reviewed in this study, it is very clear that local fashion sustainability and the global fashion industry serve to support and bolster one another as the global fashion industry through using local sustainable fashion products support the continued proper use of resources and through using these resources the global fashion industry is publicly held to be ethical and something that consumers do not mind spending their hard earned money on. The global fashion industry when using for example, crocodile skins, uses a product that is sustainable and that continues to be sustainable due to the investment of the global fashion industry in this products and the same is true of other such products.
Leadership Trustworthiness and Ethical Stewardship
Even upon an initial, cursory examination of the terms, there readily appears to be significant correlation between the concepts of leadership, trustworthiness, and ethical stewardship when applied to a corporate or…
U.S. History Midterm Exam Essay Questions, Two
Classical and laissez faire economic theories that had developed in a period when capitalism was small-scale no longer applied to a system of giant industrial and financial cartels and monopolies. By the 1880s and 1890s, as the U.S. became the leading industrial power in the world, it was already clear to Populists and Progressives that previous political and economic theories about capitalism and the proper role of the state would have to be greatly revised—in a more regulatory and socialistic direction, even if the actual "s" word was not used. John Maynard Keynes became the most important economist during the era of Fordism and industrial capitalism, and his views generally reflected those of Progressives, social democrats and New Dealers. He argued that capitalism did not produce full employment in the absence of fiscal and monetary stimulus from the central government, which would increase aggregate demand (Mankiw 770). Reduced government spending, balanced budgets and austerity measures were not the correct way to deal with depressions, although this had been the standard government response in the depressions of the 1840s, 1870s and 1890s—