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  • The Fight for Ethical Fashion: The Origins and Interactions of the Clean Clothes Campaign by Philip Balsiger
  • Jennifer Le Zotte
Philip Balsiger. The Fight for Ethical Fashion: The Origins and Interactions of the Clean Clothes Campaign. London: Routledge, 2014. 200 pp. ISBN 978-1-409-45805-0, $160 (cloth).

Fashion has inspired direct political action at least since the French Revolution, when noblemen abandoned their pink stockings and high heels to avoid the guillotine. Since widespread industrialization, prominent protests have focused more on modes and means of production than the material products themselves. In recent decades, consumer boycotts, workers' rights campaigns, and organized buy cotts have characterized the often highly publicized opposition to aspects of the clothing industry. As a result, brands and products labeled "ethical" according to a variety of environmental and human rights measures emerged. In The Fight for Ethical Fashion, Philip Balsiger examines the strategies and negotiations involved in creating one contemporary multinational consumer campaign, the Europe-wide Clean Clothes Campaign (CCC).

As outsourcing practices and rapid communication enabled the mass globalization of clothing production, protests of that process similarly adapted, connecting across borders. In an instructive contribution to social movement studies, Balsiger traces the involvement of two countries, France and Switzerland, in the CCC. Relying heavily on qualitative fieldwork and an array of empirical sources, the author starts at the campaign's roots in the changing political influences over the field of development aid and the development of consumer campaigns in the 1970s. As the campaign professionalized, the importance of planned interactions and strategic negotiations between the campaigners and their main targets grew. Despite embracing symmetrical goals of convincing major brands, corporations, and retailers to adopt and monitor codes of conduct, Switzerland and France saw contrasting reactions and disparate market outcomes. Through this comparative lens, the book shows how a single campaign elicits divergent reactions from participants—and how the varieties of capitalism and political connections influence the results of social movement pressure on corporations (7).

Studying the CCC provides a focus on a specific category of protest, one that did not center on legal change but crafted actions centered on the relations between consumers and national brands and retailers, such as Nike, Carrefour, or Migros in Switzerland (4). Moreover, CCC was a planned campaign, proactive and mostly professionally organized, characterized by restraint and orchestrated actions. In the first few chapters, Balsiger describes the changes in development aid and consumer protests throughout the 1960s and 1970s, [End Page 526] juggling genealogical descriptions for both France and Switzerland, and threading together the meanings and results of the very different political contexts and corporate or institutional influences. Chapter 2, "The Rise of Consumer Campaigns," describes the roles that diverse factions, from protesting students to religious youth groups, played in consumer activism.

The campaign that evolves is a conversation, or more exactly, a negotiation, not only among the activists in Switzerland and France, but also between campaigners and their corporate targets, wherein strategic moves were made and adapted from several identifiable directions. As Balsiger readily admits, his case study does not give equal attention to the strategic interactions on the part of both campaign makers and their targets, and so "constitutes a step" in the "strategic interactions approach" to movement studies (19). Considering the concentration on the campaigners themselves, the book is disappointingly lacking in individual accounts, which no doubt obscures significant contributions or ideas of the distinct people involved. While Balsiger does briefly highlight the important role of women in the rise of consumer campaigns in the 1970s, the narrative lacks a more in-depth exploration of the specific social contexts inspiring these women, as well as more mention of the long trans-national history of women-driven consumer actions (e.g., the White Label campaign in Progressive Era United States). The acknowledgment of gender dynamics in the construction of social movements falls away quickly, and the reader is left wondering whether women remain instrumental in the CCC's functions.

Balsiger's greatest success is in the ground-level accounts of the near-constant process of compromise involved in the CCC. Clearly, negotiations between the campaigners and the major brands, corporations, and retailers targeted tend to...

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