Reprint

Sustainable Textile Marketing

Edited by
October 2022
230 pages
  • ISBN978-3-0365-5525-6 (Hardback)
  • ISBN978-3-0365-5526-3 (PDF)

This book is a reprint of the Special Issue Sustainable Textile Marketing that was published in

Business & Economics
Environmental & Earth Sciences
Social Sciences, Arts & Humanities
Summary

We know that sustainability has become an important topic in every aspect of life. The textile, fashion, and material industries must also be sustainable, which could be imparted in their development, production, or even marketing. The textile industry has a huge market, as clothing is arguably the most important human need after food. Recently, this industry has been labeled as a polluting industry, a label that could be overcome by the proper development of textile goods and careful marketing strategies. There are specific roles that government, entrepreneurs, and even universities can play in properly educating people to make the textile industry cleaner and greener. Several journals focus only on one of the aspects of this key problem, i.e., the production of sustainable materials, textile education, or textile marketing. However, herein, we strive to bring different areas together on one platform to cover different aspects, i.e., production, policy, education, and marketing related to textile fashion and textile materials.

Format
  • Hardback
License
© 2022 by the authors; CC BY-NC-ND license
Keywords
fashion brand image; self-congruity; perceived quality; self-motivation; brand familiarity; crop production inefficiencies; stochastic frontier approach; total factor productivity; non-food crop; developing countries; BAT; BAT-AEL; K-BREF; environmental integrated permit; textile industry; South Korea; slow fashion; slow fashion consumer; consumer behavior; sustainability; organic cotton clothing (OCC); purchase willingness; brand responsibility; sustainable clothing; activated carbons; durian husk; activation; waste utilizations; adsorption; FRP; delamination damage; interlaminar fracture toughness (ILFT); short fiber toughening; value creation; brand loyalty; customer participation behavior; experience value perception; structural equation model; digital fashion; digitalized collection; online game; Chinese traditional costume; virtual game items; structural equation modeling; sustainability; digital design; regional ethnic culture; cultural capital; revitalization; Yunjian; traditional garment; fashion industry; sustainable apparel; environmental consciousness; perceived value; perceived risk; purchase intention; generational cohort; inherited knowledge system; human resource; learning; training; hands-on experience; prolonged engagement; culture and tradition; handloom industry of Sri Lanka; antibacterial; textiles; bibliometric analysis; database; web of science; n/a