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Miércoles 18 de abril de 2018
#Repost @fash_rev with @instatoolsapp ・・・ #Repost @thefarwoods It's worth remembering that the first National Woman's Day took place in the US in 1909 and was a precursor to #internationalwomensday. It "honored the 1908 garment workers strike in which women protested the poor working conditions, low wages, and sexual harassment they faced. Today the clothes we wear remain a symbol of the struggles women face, only now the women making them tend to be almost entirely in poorer countries. Women make up the great majority of garment workers in the world." Vietnam and Cambodia = 90%. Bangladesh = 80%. These women typically work long hours for extremely low wages in unsafe conditions and face sexual harassment and threats. Essentially women all over the world are still facing the same working conditions as they were a century ago in the US. Our actions (or lack of action) affect women globally today and everyday. We should be asking ourselves very candidly whether we are complicit in the environmental and human rights violations of the fast fashion industry and how we might engage with our clothes differently. #fashrevmx #quienhizomiropa Una publicación compartida de Fashion Revolution México (@fash_revmexico) el 14 Mar, 2018 a las 3:09 PDT
#Repost @fash_rev with @instatoolsapp ・・・ #Repost @thefarwoods It's worth remembering that the first National Woman's Day took place in the US in 1909 and was a precursor to #internationalwomensday. It "honored the 1908 garment workers strike in which women protested the poor working conditions, low wages, and sexual harassment they faced. Today the clothes we wear remain a symbol of the struggles women face, only now the women making them tend to be almost entirely in poorer countries. Women make up the great majority of garment workers in the world." Vietnam and Cambodia = 90%. Bangladesh = 80%. These women typically work long hours for extremely low wages in unsafe conditions and face sexual harassment and threats. Essentially women all over the world are still facing the same working conditions as they were a century ago in the US. Our actions (or lack of action) affect women globally today and everyday. We should be asking ourselves very candidly whether we are complicit in the environmental and human rights violations of the fast fashion industry and how we might engage with our clothes differently. #fashrevmx #quienhizomiropa
Una publicación compartida de Fashion Revolution México (@fash_revmexico) el 14 Mar, 2018 a las 3:09 PDT