Corporate Social Responsibility Influencing Sustainability within the Fashion Industry. A Systematic Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Background
2.1. Corporate Social Responsibility
2.2. Sustainable Development and Sustainability
2.3. The Connection between CSR and Sustainability
2.4. The Micro-Meso-Macro Framework
2.5. Sustainable Fashion
3. Methods
3.1. Planning Review
3.2. Conducting the Review
3.3. Inclusion and Exclusion Criteria
3.4. Reporting and Dissemination
4. Findings
4.1. Years and Journal of Publication
4.2. Research Focus by Regions
4.3. Studies by a Theoretical Approach
4.4. Overview of Studies by Aim, Purpose, and Objective
4.5. Overviews of Keywords by Industry and Frequency of Keywords
4.6. Analysis of Studies by Key Concepts
4.7. Key Topics and Related Sub-Topics
4.8. Corporate Social Responsibility
4.9. Sustainability
4.10. Contribution and Suggestion for Future Research
5. Discussion
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Author (Year) | Title | Journal | Keywords |
---|---|---|---|
Adam (2018) | The Role of Human Resource Management (HRM) for the Implementation of Sustainable Product-Service Systems (PSS)—An Analysis of Fashion Retailers | Sustainability | Product-service systems (PSS); Human resource management (HRM); Fashion industry; Sustainable business models; Sustainable retail |
Ahlstrom (2010) | Corporate Response to CSO Criticism: Decoupling the Corporate Responsibility Discourse from Business Practice | Corporate Social Responsibility and Environmental Management | Corporate responsibility; discourse theory; New institutional theory; Civil society organizations (CSOs); Outsourced production; Garment industry; Code of conduct; Profit maximization |
Albloushy et al. 2019) | Purchasing environmentally sustainable apparel: The attitudes and intentions of female Kuwaiti consumers | International Journal of Consumer Studies | Environmental concern; Environmental knowledge; Environmentally sustainable Apparel; purchasing behaviors; Kuwait |
Anner (2017) | Monitoring Workers’ Rights: The Limits of Voluntary Social Compliance Initiatives in Labor Repressive Regimes | Global Policy | None |
Anner (2018) | CSR Participation Committees, Wildcat Strikes and the Sourcing Squeeze in Global Supply Chains | British Journal of Industrial Relations | None |
Aquino (2011) | The Performance of Italian Clothing Firms for Shareholders, Workers and Public Administrations: An Econometric Analysis | Journal of Accounting Research & Audit Practices | None |
Arrigo (2018) | The flagship stores as sustainability communication channels for luxury fashion retailers | Journal of Retailing and Consumer Services | Flagship store; Sustainable retailing; Luxury fashion brands; Luxury sustainability; In-store communication |
Athukorala et al. (2018) | Repositioning in the global apparel value chain in the post-MFA era: Strategic issues and evidence from Sri Lanka | Development Policy Review | Apparel industry; Global value chain; Multi-Fiber Arrangement; Sri Lanka |
Austgulen (2016) | Environmentally Sustainable Textile Consumption-What Characterizes the Political Textile Consumers? | Journal of Consumer Policy | Sustainable consumption; Political consumption; Textiles; Clothing; Environmental regulation; Consumerism |
Bair et al. (2012) | From Varieties of Capitalism to Varieties of Activism: The Antisweat shop Movement in Comparative Perspective | Social Problems | Anti-sweatshop movement; Global commodity chains; Transnational advocacy networks; Varieties of capitalism; Labor rights |
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Baskaran et al. (2012) | Indian textile suppliers’ sustainability evaluation using the grey approach | International Journal of Production Economics | Grey approach; India; Supplier evaluation; Sustainability; Textile industry |
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Keywords | Sub—Keywords |
---|---|
Corporate Social Responsibility | Corporate Social Responsibility—CSR Corporate Responsibility—CR Stakeholder |
Fashion—Fashion industry | Apparel Clothes Garments Textile |
Sustainability—The three pillars | Economic Environment Social |
Journal | Number of Publications | Percentage | Methodology | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Qualitative | Quantitative | Multiple | Other | |||
Sustainability | 23 | 11% | 14 | 5 | 0 | 4 |
Journal of Cleaner Production | 17 | 8.1% | 12 | 5 | 0 | 0 |
International Journal of Consumer Studies | 13 | 6.2% | 5 | 6 | 0 | 2 |
Journal of Business Ethics | 11 | 5.3% | 8 | 2 | 1 | 0 |
Journal of Fashion Marketing and Management | 9 | 4.3% | 7 | 2 | 0 | 0 |
International Journal of Production Economics | 6 | 2.9% | 3 | 1 | 0 | 2 |
Journal of Corporate Citizenship | 6 | 2.9% | 6 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Corporate Social Responsibility and Environmental Management | 4 | 1.9% | 1 | 2 | 1 | 0 |
Fashion and Textiles | 4 | 1.9% | 0 | 4 | 0 | 0 |
Accounting Auditing & Accountability Journal | 3 | 1.4% | 3 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Design Journal | 3 | 1.4% | 3 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Fibers & Textiles in Eastern Europe | 3 | 1.4% | 2 | 1 | 0 | 0 |
Transportation Research Part E-Logistics and Transportation Review | 3 | 1.4% | 2 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
Others publisher with two publication | 28 | 13.4% | 12 | 9 | 0 | 7 |
Others publisher with one publication | 76 | 36.4% | 39 | 23 | 4 | 10 |
Total | 209 | 100% | 117 | 60 | 6 | 26 |
Industry | Numbers of Studies | Percentage of Studies |
---|---|---|
Fashion industry | 61 | 29% |
Apparel industry | 55 | 26% |
Textile industry | 43 | 21% |
Garment industry | 19 | 9% |
Clothing industry | 17 | 8% |
Slow (Luxury) fashion | 9 | 4% |
Fast fashion | 5 | 2% |
Total | 209 | 100% |
Corporate Social Responsibility | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Frequency of Keywords | Frequency of Keywords | ||||
Keywords | Percentage | Keywords | Percentage | ||
1. CSR | 60 | 15% | 14. Culture | 11 | 3% |
2. Industry | 44 | 11% | 15. Corporation | 9 | 2% |
3. Environment | 30 | 8% | 16. Management | 8 | 2% |
4. Countries | 26 | 7% | 17. Economic | 7 | 2% |
5. Labor | 23 | 6% | 18. Theories | 7 | 2% |
6. Organizations | 23 | 6% | 19. Sustainability | 6 | 2% |
7. Ethics | 22 | 6% | 20. Drivers & barriers | 6 | 2% |
8. Social factors | 20 | 5% | 21. Human rights | 6 | 2% |
9. Business | 17 | 4% | 22. Policy, strategic | 5 | 1% |
10. Communication | 14 | 4% | 23. Values | 4 | 1% |
11. Supply chain, | 14 | 4% | 24. Institutional | 4 | 1% |
12. Consumers | 13 | 3% | 25. Activism | 4 | 1% |
13. Stakeholders | 11 | 3% | |||
The total frequency of keywords | 393 | 100% |
Sustainability | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Frequency of Keywords | Frequency of Keywords | ||||
Keywords | Percentage | Keywords | Percentage | ||
1. Industry | 65 | 15% | 17. Culture | 5 | 1% |
2. Sustainability | 64 | 15% | 18. Economic | 4 | 1% |
3. Business | 46 | 11% | 19. Pollution | 4 | 1% |
4. Environment | 40 | 9% | 20. Regulation | 4 | 1% |
5. Products | 30 | 7% | 21. Life cycle assessment | 4 | 1% |
6. Consumers | 28 | 7% | 22. Ethical | 3 | 1% |
7. Supply chain | 26 | 6% | 23. CSR | 3 | 1% |
8. Re-use-recycle | 14 | 3% | 24. Drivers & barriers | 3 | 1% |
9. Countries | 13 | 3% | 25. Theory of planned behavior | 3 | 1% |
10. Management | 10 | 2% | 26. Human rights | 3 | 1% |
11. Measure | 8 | 2% | 27. Technology | 2 | 0.50% |
12. Designing | 8 | 2% | 28. Entrepreneurship | 2 | 0.50% |
13. Marketing | 8 | 2% | 29. Activist | 2 | 0.50% |
14. Structural-policies | 7 | 2% | 30. Resources | 1 | 0.20% |
15. Social sustainability | 6 | 1% | 31. Employee | 1 | 0.20% |
16. Consumption | 5 | 1% | |||
The total frequency of keywords | 423 | 100% |
Categories Related to the Concepts | Number of Studies | Percentage |
---|---|---|
Sustainability | 82 | 39% |
CSR | 74 | 35% |
Other | 53 | 25% |
Total papers | 209 | 100% |
Key Topic | Sub-Topics |
---|---|
Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) | Activities, Commitments (including Anti-sweatshop, Developing countries, Labor and workers conditions), Culture, Brand equity, Business models, Communication, Drivers and barriers, Ethical fashion, Financial management, Framework, Institutional pressure, Management approach, Regulations, Strategies, Supply chain, Sustainability practices, |
Sustainability | Business models (including Innovation), Commitment, Consumption, Drivers and barriers, Environmental practice, Environmental management system, Equity, Knowledge, Life Cycle Assessment (LCA), Lifestyle (values), Management and performance, Measurement (TBL), Slow fashion, Supply chain, Waste (reuse and recycle) |
Other Key Topics | Sub-Topics |
Consumers/Buyers behavior | Attitudes, Chinese/Polish consumers, Disposal intention, Life cycle assessment, Purchase intention, Secondhand clothing, Sustainable clothing, Young consumers intention attitude and behavior, Buyers behavior Community, Purchase intention for environmental and sustainable products, The role of clothing status symbol |
Consumption | Apparel, Clothing, Fashion products, Slow fashion consumption |
Corporate sustainability | Business models, Consumers and businesses, Environment and behavior, Employees perceptions, Low-cost, Reported indicators, Reports |
Economic | Circular economy, Circular model for fashion, Creative industry, Markdown money policy, Political economy government boundaries, Social and environmental performance, Sustainability |
Environmental | Barriers, Eco-fashion, Efficiency, Environmental practice and impacts, Entrepreneurship, Impacts of clothing. Internal motivation, Local clothes, homemade clothing, Management, Microplastic pollution, Performance, Regulation, Strategies, Sustainable solution, Technology to recycle clothes |
Ethical | Codes of conducts, Ethical clothing, Ethical products, Social and eco-labeling |
Marketing | Activities, Awareness for green products, Business practice, Luxury fashion strategies |
Regulations | Community, Industry, Regulatory pressure, Workers rights internationally, Workers rights suppliers, Government attention towards the local economy, Rana Plaza, Policies and government approach |
Relationships | Between corporate sustainability and business model innovation, Between Corporate Social responsibility (CSR) and consumer behavior in an international setting, Relationship building in fashion retail, In social media |
Social Responsibility | Corporate responsibility, Civil society organizations (CSOs), Fair Labor Association (FLA), Governments and authorities’ role, Human resources management (HRM), Knowledge and attitudes, Environmentally sustainable apparel (ESA), Life Cycle Assessment guidelines, Practice, Professional fashion models’ reporting, Strategies, Socially sustainable practices, Supply chain orientation (SRSCO), UN guiding principles business and human rights |
Stakeholders | A managerial perception, Collaboration, Innovative business strategy, Responsibility |
Strategies | Cleaner production, Environmental, Management control systems (MCS) Proactive, Structural adaption |
Supply chain Management | Code of conduct, Design, Environmental sustainability adaption, Global supply chain, Green drivers and practice, Human behavior, Labor network, Life Cycle Assessment (LCA), Measuring Sustainability (TBL), Modern slavery Product lifetimes and obsolescence, Product service systems (PSS) intervention Responsibility, Slow fashion definition and production, Sourcing in China foreign firms, Supply Chain management, Strategic CSR, Sustainability roadmap, Transparency, Used Intimate Apparel Collection (UIAC), Value chain, Value creation, Working conditions |
Technology | Biotechnology clothes made of renewable or organic materials, Drying process technique, Self-cleaning textiles |
Subject | Suggestions for Future Studies |
---|---|
Advertisement | Advertisement and green advertisements [33] Anti-consumption advertisements [189] Social media messages, influences on subjective norms, close friends and relatives [120] |
Consumption | Purchase intentions, attitudes regarding anti-consumption behavior [189] Second-hand clothing, other than renting and swapping clothes [190] Consumers’ overconsumption as a motivation to increase profits [164] Political consumption, informal clothing exchanges, improved laundering, maintenance, mending, and disposal strategies [166] |
CSR | Hazardous waste, investment, plant closings, political support [26] Workplace-related CSR and intangible assets in more depth [86] Labor-intensive industries in developing countries [87] Motivations and rationales leading firms to adopt CSR initiatives [157] The nature of institutional pressures [161] Potential influences related to social desirability [191] The pressures of growth and CSR across companies of different sizes [20] The dynamics of non-verbal and verbal communication [192] Human resource components-impacts on the product-service success [142] CSR drivers-aspects and dynamic effects on sustainable lifestyle [124] Indicator disclosures and changes over time [193] If executives’ perception concurs with employees’ perception [142] The views of other actors in the supply chain network [194] The stimulus to outsource and reduce the cost, foreign companies [195] |
Cultural | Marketing strategies to enhance communication of fast fashion [40] Theorize relationship partners with different cultural backgrounds [196] Cultural differences, perceived justice, governance mechanisms [121] Cross-cultural differences in different countries-luxury consumers [30] |
Development on existing study | Epistemological issues, absorptive capacities, and the difference between acquiring knowledge and information [172] Corporate sustainability performance [138] How actors use corporate sustainability as a risk management tool during an actual crisis [119] Tradeoff investigations at the tactical and operational planning levels [23] Distinct clusters of green consumers [140] |
Environmental | Carbon emission evaluation functions, various supplies, energy, waste, and labor [118] To improve environmental sustainability by the use of a carbon footprint tax, examine the carbon quota issue and the corresponding probable trading mechanism in an open market for green shipment control [197] |
Performance | Corporate performance regarding human rights [198] The productivity and financial performance of SMEs before and after the implementation of green technologies [91] The relationship between sustainability and performance outcomes [180] Whether sustainably performing companies increasingly invest in socially responsible governance [105] Misalignment between internal and external practices, potential implications for companies, deepening relationships between strategic approaches to sustainability and performance [186] |
Supply chain | Consumers’ ethical decision-making and supply chain management in the apparel industry [199] The impact of social compliance effectiveness, workers’ rights violations in the global supply chain [200] Government regulation, market structure, customer pressure [201] Outline sophisticated managerial, academic implications at supplier level [182] |
Sustainability | Development of reliable systems between the three pillars of sustainability [117] Sustainable packaging, manufacturing processes, and the design process [31] Industry practitioners to achieve a sustainable competitive advantage [202] Design for recycling, integration and creative design process [203] Union, NGO relationship, workers’ rights and other areas of CSR [204] An element of good practice, influence factor for high-performing companies [198] The relationship between perceptions of self and ethical purchasing behavior, and the likelihood of sustainable clothing consumption [159] Sustainability strategies, elements of fashion business models, driving forces influencing actions, measurements, key performance indicators, transparency, and disclosure [15] Improvement and standardization of indicators, reliable systems for the three pillars [177] Evolution of fashion business models, driven by enlightened sustainable startups [115] Sustainable apparel purchasing behavior needs exploration [123] Association between retail price, cost of the physical return, and the impact of product return on market demand [96] Relationships between different types of sustainable textiles and apparel products [205] Income levels and attitudes, environmentally sustainable apparel, educational standards, behavioral intentions, product development, marketing and retailing strategies [206] Developing a sustainability stewardship framework for future studies [128] The moral responsibility of corporate sustainability in other countries [207] |
Stakeholders | Explore brand influence, the brand’s stakeholders to identify and evaluate conscientious brands [88] Political context, the existence of avenues for engagement and dialogue, opportunities for civic engagement and translating constituencies into stakeholders [109] |
Theoretical suggestions | Employ established theories, e.g., stakeholder theory or institutional theory [184] Address the extent to which theorization by a central actor is picked up by other actors, the impact that it has on further change and stability in the field [208] |
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Thorisdottir, T.S.; Johannsdottir, L. Corporate Social Responsibility Influencing Sustainability within the Fashion Industry. A Systematic Review. Sustainability 2020, 12, 9167. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12219167
Thorisdottir TS, Johannsdottir L. Corporate Social Responsibility Influencing Sustainability within the Fashion Industry. A Systematic Review. Sustainability. 2020; 12(21):9167. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12219167
Chicago/Turabian StyleThorisdottir, Thorey S, and Lara Johannsdottir. 2020. "Corporate Social Responsibility Influencing Sustainability within the Fashion Industry. A Systematic Review" Sustainability 12, no. 21: 9167. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12219167
APA StyleThorisdottir, T. S., & Johannsdottir, L. (2020). Corporate Social Responsibility Influencing Sustainability within the Fashion Industry. A Systematic Review. Sustainability, 12(21), 9167. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12219167