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Fashion law encompasses a wide variety of issues that concern an article of clothing or a fashion accessory, starting from the moment they are designed and following them through distribution and marketing phases, all the way until they reach the end-user. Contract law, intellectual property, company law, tax law, international trade, and customs law are of fundamental importance in defining this new field of law that is gradually taking shape. This volume focuses on the new frontiers of fashion law, taking into account the various fields that have recently emerged as being of great interest for the entire fashion world: from sustainable fashion to wearable technologies, from new remedies to cultural appropriation to the regulation of model weight, from advertising law on the digital market to the impact of new technologies on product distribution. The purpose is to stimulate discussion on contemporary problems that have the potential to define new boundaries of fashion law, such as the impact of the heightened ethical sensitivity of consumers (who increasingly require effective solutions), that a comparative law perspective renders more interesting. The volume seeks to sketch out the new legal fields in which the fashion industry is getting involved, identifying the new boundaries of fashion law that existing literature has not dealt with in a comprehensive manner.
fashion --- influencer marketing --- online advertising --- self-regulation --- code of ethics --- sustainable fashion --- ethical consumer --- fashion law --- fast fashion --- sustainability --- corporate social responsibility --- circular fashion --- textile and clothing waste --- EU Waste Framework Directive --- fashion shows --- copyright --- performers’ rights --- collective works --- image --- right of privacy --- right of publicity --- Photoshop --- models --- cultural appropriation --- intellectual property --- traditional knowledge --- traditional designs --- private governance --- Corporate Social Responsibility --- folklore --- art --- copyright law --- intellectual property law --- artistic value --- social media --- comparative law --- wearable devices --- GDPR --- data breach --- smart fashion --- smart clothes --- transparency --- privacy --- data protection --- legal informatics --- cybersecurity
Choose an application
Fashion law encompasses a wide variety of issues that concern an article of clothing or a fashion accessory, starting from the moment they are designed and following them through distribution and marketing phases, all the way until they reach the end-user. Contract law, intellectual property, company law, tax law, international trade, and customs law are of fundamental importance in defining this new field of law that is gradually taking shape. This volume focuses on the new frontiers of fashion law, taking into account the various fields that have recently emerged as being of great interest for the entire fashion world: from sustainable fashion to wearable technologies, from new remedies to cultural appropriation to the regulation of model weight, from advertising law on the digital market to the impact of new technologies on product distribution. The purpose is to stimulate discussion on contemporary problems that have the potential to define new boundaries of fashion law, such as the impact of the heightened ethical sensitivity of consumers (who increasingly require effective solutions), that a comparative law perspective renders more interesting. The volume seeks to sketch out the new legal fields in which the fashion industry is getting involved, identifying the new boundaries of fashion law that existing literature has not dealt with in a comprehensive manner.
Law --- fashion --- influencer marketing --- online advertising --- self-regulation --- code of ethics --- sustainable fashion --- ethical consumer --- fashion law --- fast fashion --- sustainability --- corporate social responsibility --- circular fashion --- textile and clothing waste --- EU Waste Framework Directive --- fashion shows --- copyright --- performers’ rights --- collective works --- image --- right of privacy --- right of publicity --- Photoshop --- models --- cultural appropriation --- intellectual property --- traditional knowledge --- traditional designs --- private governance --- Corporate Social Responsibility --- folklore --- art --- copyright law --- intellectual property law --- artistic value --- social media --- comparative law --- wearable devices --- GDPR --- data breach --- smart fashion --- smart clothes --- transparency --- privacy --- data protection --- legal informatics --- cybersecurity --- fashion --- influencer marketing --- online advertising --- self-regulation --- code of ethics --- sustainable fashion --- ethical consumer --- fashion law --- fast fashion --- sustainability --- corporate social responsibility --- circular fashion --- textile and clothing waste --- EU Waste Framework Directive --- fashion shows --- copyright --- performers’ rights --- collective works --- image --- right of privacy --- right of publicity --- Photoshop --- models --- cultural appropriation --- intellectual property --- traditional knowledge --- traditional designs --- private governance --- Corporate Social Responsibility --- folklore --- art --- copyright law --- intellectual property law --- artistic value --- social media --- comparative law --- wearable devices --- GDPR --- data breach --- smart fashion --- smart clothes --- transparency --- privacy --- data protection --- legal informatics --- cybersecurity
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Over the past two decades, governments have delegated extensive regulatory authority to international private-sector organizations. This internationalization and privatization of rule making has been motivated not only by the economic benefits of common rules for global markets, but also by the realization that government regulators often lack the expertise and resources to deal with increasingly complex and urgent regulatory tasks. The New Global Rulers examines who writes the rules in international private organizations, as well as who wins, who loses--and why. Tim Büthe and Walter Mattli examine three powerful global private regulators: the International Accounting Standards Board, which develops financial reporting rules used by corporations in more than a hundred countries; and the International Organization for Standardization and the International Electrotechnical Commission, which account for 85 percent of all international product standards. Büthe and Mattli offer both a new framework for understanding global private regulation and detailed empirical analyses of such regulation based on multi-country, multi-industry business surveys. They find that global rule making by technical experts is highly political, and that even though rule making has shifted to the international level, domestic institutions remain crucial. Influence in this form of global private governance is not a function of the economic power of states, but of the ability of domestic standard-setters to provide timely information and speak with a single voice. Büthe and Mattli show how domestic institutions' abilities differ, particularly between the two main standardization players, the United States and Europe.
Commercial policy --International cooperation. --- Complementarity (International law). --- Foreign trade regulation. --- International finance. --- Standardization --International cooperation. --- Commercial policy --- Foreign trade regulation --- International finance --- Standardization --- Complementarity (International law) --- Commerce --- Business & Economics --- International Commerce --- International cooperation --- -Foreign trade regulation --- -382.3 --- Industrial engineering --- Grading --- Mass production --- Specifications --- Testing --- International monetary system --- International money --- Finance --- International economic relations --- Export and import controls --- Foreign trade control --- Import and export controls --- International trade --- International trade control --- International trade regulation --- Prohibited exports and imports --- Trade regulation --- Foreign trade policy --- International trade policy --- Trade policy --- Economic policy --- Law and legislation --- Government policy --- E-books --- International cooperation. --- Complementarity principle (International law) --- Principle of complementarity (International law) --- Criminal procedure (International law) --- Jurisdiction (International law) --- International criminal courts --- International Accounting Standards Board. --- International Organization for Standardization. --- International Electrotechnical Commission. --- Commission Electrotechnique Internationale --- International organization for standardization --- Organisation internationale de normalisation --- IASB --- Law and globalization --- Privatization --- Denationalization --- Privatisation --- Contracting out --- Corporatization --- Government ownership --- Globalization and law --- Globalization --- Kuo chi piao chun hua tsu chih --- 国际标准化组织 --- Międzynarodowa Organizacja Normalizacyjna --- Organizația Internațională de Standardizare --- Mezinárodní organizace pro normalizaci --- ISO --- ИСО --- I.S.O. --- Mezhdunarodnai︠a︡ organizat︠s︡ii︠a︡ po standartizat︠s︡ii --- Международная организация по стандартизации --- International Standards Association --- International Standards Organization --- Kokusai Hyōjunka Kikō --- 国際標凖化機構 --- Europe. --- Financial Accounting Standards Board. --- Germany. --- United Kingdom. --- United States. --- accounting governance. --- accounting regulation. --- business administration. --- domestic interests. --- domestic standardization. --- economics. --- financial markets. --- financial reporting standards. --- focal rule-making institutions. --- global financial markets. --- global financial reporting. --- global private governance. --- global private regulation. --- global product markets. --- global regulation. --- global regulatory governance. --- global rule-making. --- institutional complementarity theory. --- institutional complementarity. --- institutional fragmentation. --- institutional reform. --- institutional structure. --- intergovernmental organizations. --- international competition. --- international private organizations. --- international product standards. --- international standard-setting. --- international standardization. --- law. --- legitimacy. --- market-based private regulation. --- nonmarket private governance. --- nontariff trade barriers. --- political science. --- power. --- private regulators. --- privatization. --- product markets. --- product regulation. --- product standards. --- public policy. --- public regulatory agencies. --- regulatory authority. --- rule-making institutions. --- rule-making. --- sociology. --- standardization. --- transgovernmental cooperation.
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