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Circular economy of fashion: benefits and challenges for French micro and small brands

The fashion industry is globally recognized as one of the major polluters, causing significant environmental and social concerns. Its complex value chain, from the intensive non-renewable resource use during raw material acquisition to human rights issues in manufacturing, and its unsustainable end-...

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Main Author: Dupont, Hadrien
Other Authors: Meyer, Camille
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Graduate School of Business (GSB) 2025
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access_status_str Open Access
author Dupont, Hadrien
author2 Meyer, Camille
author_browse Dupont, Hadrien
Meyer, Camille
author_facet Meyer, Camille
Dupont, Hadrien
author_sort Dupont, Hadrien
collection Thesis
description The fashion industry is globally recognized as one of the major polluters, causing significant environmental and social concerns. Its complex value chain, from the intensive non-renewable resource use during raw material acquisition to human rights issues in manufacturing, and its unsustainable end-of-life solutions, underscores an industry struggling with profound challenges. In response to these challenges, the notion of a circular economy emerges as a transformative approach to reimagine and redesign production and consumption cycles, aiming to retain product value, reduce waste, and foster sustainability. The central research question of this study is the following: "What are the key challenges and opportunities for micro and small-sized fashion brands in adopting a successful circular business model?" Addressing this, the research provides a deep dive into the concept of circularity within the fashion sector, specifically focusing on French micro and small-sized brands. These brands, a blend of those organically born with sustainable principles and those that have adeptly transitioned towards sustainable practices, offer a diverse palette of innovative strategies. They encompass distinctive sustainable practices ranging from upcycling, promoting second-hand fashion, adhering to sustainable production methodologies, to the use of recycled fabrics. Utilizing qualitative methodologies, this research adopted a comparative approach, interviewing 12 such distinctive brands alongside a consultant specializing in second-hand fashion. This method depicted a rich, multifaceted perspective on the challenges intrinsic to circular business models in the fashion domain. From this exploration, the findings were clustered into three predominant categories: striking a balance between economic viability, ecological responsibility, and social equity; identifying and leveraging driving factors while recognizing potential opportunities; and understanding and navigating barriers that hinder circular adoption. This study stands as an important contribution to existing literature, providing a nuanced roadmap specifically tailored for French micro and small-sized brands. Its insights illuminate pathways, guiding these brands towards the successful adoption and nuanced implementation of circular business models among a challenging industry context.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:33:55.830Z
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provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2025
publishDateRange 2025
publishDateSort 2025
publisher Graduate School of Business (GSB)
publisherStr Graduate School of Business (GSB)
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/40886 Circular economy of fashion: benefits and challenges for French micro and small brands Dupont, Hadrien Meyer, Camille fashion industry The fashion industry is globally recognized as one of the major polluters, causing significant environmental and social concerns. Its complex value chain, from the intensive non-renewable resource use during raw material acquisition to human rights issues in manufacturing, and its unsustainable end-of-life solutions, underscores an industry struggling with profound challenges. In response to these challenges, the notion of a circular economy emerges as a transformative approach to reimagine and redesign production and consumption cycles, aiming to retain product value, reduce waste, and foster sustainability. The central research question of this study is the following: "What are the key challenges and opportunities for micro and small-sized fashion brands in adopting a successful circular business model?" Addressing this, the research provides a deep dive into the concept of circularity within the fashion sector, specifically focusing on French micro and small-sized brands. These brands, a blend of those organically born with sustainable principles and those that have adeptly transitioned towards sustainable practices, offer a diverse palette of innovative strategies. They encompass distinctive sustainable practices ranging from upcycling, promoting second-hand fashion, adhering to sustainable production methodologies, to the use of recycled fabrics. Utilizing qualitative methodologies, this research adopted a comparative approach, interviewing 12 such distinctive brands alongside a consultant specializing in second-hand fashion. This method depicted a rich, multifaceted perspective on the challenges intrinsic to circular business models in the fashion domain. From this exploration, the findings were clustered into three predominant categories: striking a balance between economic viability, ecological responsibility, and social equity; identifying and leveraging driving factors while recognizing potential opportunities; and understanding and navigating barriers that hinder circular adoption. This study stands as an important contribution to existing literature, providing a nuanced roadmap specifically tailored for French micro and small-sized brands. Its insights illuminate pathways, guiding these brands towards the successful adoption and nuanced implementation of circular business models among a challenging industry context. 2025-02-07T09:55:12Z 2025-02-07T09:55:12Z 2024 2025-02-07T09:52:25Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters MA http://hdl.handle.net/11427/40886 eng application/pdf Graduate School of Business (GSB) Faculty of Commerce University of Cape Town
spellingShingle fashion industry
Dupont, Hadrien
Circular economy of fashion: benefits and challenges for French micro and small brands
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Circular economy of fashion: benefits and challenges for French micro and small brands
title_full Circular economy of fashion: benefits and challenges for French micro and small brands
title_fullStr Circular economy of fashion: benefits and challenges for French micro and small brands
title_full_unstemmed Circular economy of fashion: benefits and challenges for French micro and small brands
title_short Circular economy of fashion: benefits and challenges for French micro and small brands
title_sort circular economy of fashion benefits and challenges for french micro and small brands
topic fashion industry
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/40886
work_keys_str_mv AT duponthadrien circulareconomyoffashionbenefitsandchallengesforfrenchmicroandsmallbrands