References
- Allen, W., et al., 2018. Who counts in crises? the new geopolitics of international migration and refugee governance. Geopolitics, 23 (1), 217–243.
- Anner, M. 2020. Abandoned? The impact of Covid-19 on workers and businesses at the bottom of global garment supply chains. Centre for Global Workers’ Rights. https://www.workersrights.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/Abandoned-Penn-State-WRC-Report-March-27-2020.pdf [Accessed 3 April 2020].
- Bain, M. 2018. Two garment factory disasters a century apart show how globalization has sapped labor’s power. Quartz, 25 April. https://qz.com/1255041/two-garment-factory-disasters-a-century-apart/ [Accessed 10 December 2020].
- Barnett, C., et al., 2010. Globalizing responsibility: The political rationalities of ethical consumption. West Sussex: Wiley-Blackwell.
- Bartley, T., et al., 2015. Looking behind the label. Bloomington: Indiana UP.
- Bhavnani, K., 2019. Climate futures: re-imagining global climate justice. London: Zed Books.
- Bland, A., and Campbell, D. 2020. Some Leicester factories stayed open and forced staff to come in, report warns. The Guardian, 30 June. https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2020/jun/30/some-leicester-factories-stayed-open-and-forced-staff-to-come-in [Accessed 16 July 2020].
- Business and Human Rights Resource Centre. 2020a. COVID-19 action tracker. Business and Human Rights Resource Centre. https://covid19.business-humanrights.org/en/tracker/ [Accessed 21 June 2020].
- Business and Human Rights Resource Centre. 2020b. COVID-19 action tracker: Bangladesh. Business and Human Rights Resource Centre, 10 December. https://www.business-humanrights.org/en/from-us/covid-19-action-tracker/bangladesh/ [Accessed 10 December 2020].
- Business and Human Rights Resource Centre. 2020c. Major fashion brands record profits while vulnerable workers languish in poverty. Business and Human Rights Resource Centre, 11 November. https://www.business-humanrights.org/en/from-us/media-centre/major-fashion-brands-record-profits-while-vulnerable-workers-languish-in-poverty/ [Accessed 10 December].
- Business of Fashion and McKinsey & Co. 2020. The State of Fashion 2021.
- Change.org. 2020. #PayUp Petition. https://www.change.org/p/unless-gap-primark-c-a-payup-millions-of-garment-makers-will-go-hungry [Accessed 4 July 2020].
- Davey, J. 2020. Asos sees quadrupling of profit on strong pandemic demand. Business of Fashion, 14 October. https://www.businessoffashion.com/articles/retail/asos-sees-quadrupling-of-profit-on-strong-pandemic-demand [Accessed 10 December 2020].
- De Maria, B., 2008. Neo-colonialism through measurement: a critique of the corruption perception index. Critical perspectives on international business, 4 (2/3), 184–202.
- Debter, L. 2019. The world's largest apparel companies 2019: Dior remains on top, Lululemon and Foot Locker gain ground. Forbes, 15 May. https://www.forbes.com/sites/laurendebter/2019/05/15/worlds-largest-apparel-companies-2019/#28315fcc390a [Accessed 25 July 2020].
- Ethical Clothing Australia. 2020. #WEWEARAUSTRALIAN … , Instagram, 22 April. https://www.instagram.com/p/B_RbWcVg2cN/ [Accessed 21 December 2020].
- Fitz-Henry, E., 2012. Rethinking ‘remoteness’: The space-time of corporate causation. In: G. Hage, and R. Eckersley, ed. Responsibility. Melbourne: Melbourne University Press, 174–186.
- Fitzpatrick, L. 2020. Coronavirus and the underserved: we are not all in this together. Forbes, 2 April. https://www.forbes.com/sites/lisafitzpatrick/2020/04/02/covid-19-and-the-underserved-we-are-not-all-in-this-together/#4ce654ba5a71 [Accessed 18 July 2020].
- Gaztambide-Fernández, R. 2020. What is solidarity? During coronavirus and always, it’s more than ‘we’re all in this together’. The Conversation, 14 April. https://theconversation.com/what-is-solidarity-during-coronavirus-and-always-its-more-than-were-all-in-this-together-135002 [Accessed 18 July 2020].
- Gibson-Graham, J., 2008. Diverse economies: performative practices for 'other worlds'. Progress in human geography, 32 (5), 613–632.
- Goodman, M., 2004. Reading fair trade: political ecological imaginary and the moral economy of fair trade foods. Political geography, 23 (7), 891–915.
- Guarnieri, M. 2020. Stop saying ‘we’re all in this together’. You have money. It’s not the same. The Washington Post, 18 April. https://www.washingtonpost.com/outlook/2020/04/18/coronavirus-retail-jobs-inequality/ [Accessed 18 July 2020].
- Guterres, A. 2020. We are all in this Together: Human Rights and COVID-19 Response and Recovery. United Nations, 23 April. https://www.un.org/en/un-coronavirus-communications-team/we-are-all-together-human-rights-and-covid-19-response-and [Accessed 18 July 2020].
- Hacking, I., 1982. Biopower and the avalanche of printed numbers. Humanities in society, 5 (3-4), 279–295.
- Haq, R. 2020. Corona: BGMEA President deliver Massages to International Buyers to stay with Bangladesh RMG. YouTube, 23 March. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iwB6vITvdgg [Accessed 29 March 2020].
- Horton, K., 2018. Just use what you have: ethical fashion discourse and the feminisation of responsibility. Australian feminist studies, 33 (98), 515–529.
- Industriall. 2020. COVID-19 – an existential crisis for the garment industry. Industriall Global Union, 23 March. http://www.industriall-union.org/covid-19-an-existential-crisis-for-the-garment-industry 23 March 2020. [Accessed 21 June 2020].
- International Labour Organisation. 2020. COVID-19: Action in the global garment industry, 22 April. https://www.ilo.org/wcmsp5/groups/public/—ed_dialogue/—dialogue/documents/statement/wcms_742371.pdf [Accessed 1 June 2020].
- Jackson, S.J., Bailey, M., and Foucault Welles, B., 2020. #Hashtag activism: networks of race and gender justice. Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press.
- Jane, E. 2020. How to support your local designers amid Covid-19. Russh, 14 April. https://www.russh.com/supporting-australian-fashion-designers-coronavirus/ [Accessed 30 June 2020].
- Kelly, A. 2020. Primark and Matalan among retailers allegedly cancelling £2.4bn orders in ‘catastrophic’ move for Bangladesh. The Guardian, 2 April. https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2020/apr/02/fashion-brands-cancellations-of-24bn-orders-catastrophic-for-bangladesh [Accessed 12 April 2020].
- Khan, R., 2019. ‘Be creative’ in Bangladesh? Mobility, empowerment and precarity in ethical fashion enterprise. Cultural studies, 33 (6), 1029–1049.
- Le Baron, G., Lister, J., and Dauvergne, P., 2017. Governing global supply chain sustainability through the ethical audit regime. Globalizations, 14 (6), 958–975.
- Legesse, K. 2020. Racism is at the heart of fast fashion – it’s time for change. The Guardian. 11 June. https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2020/jun/11/racism-is-at-the-heart-of-fast-fashion-its-time-for-change [Accessed 11 December 2020].
- Lewis, M. 2020. Opinion: Big brands have mistreated their workers throughout the Covid-19 crisis. Thomson Reuters Foundation News, 13 November. https://news.trust.org/item/20201113123916-2hj8y/ [Accessed 7 December 2020].
- Mason, P. 2020. Will coronavirus signal the end of capitalism? Aljazeera, 3 April. https://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/opinion/coronavirus-signal-capitalism-200330092216678.html [Accessed 30 June 2020].
- Miller, L. 2020. Coronavirus outbreak hits Los Angeles Apparel with more than 300 infections, 4 employee deaths. Los Angeles Times, 11 July. https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2020-07-12/coronavirus-outbreak-hits-los-apparel-with-more-than-300-infections-4-employee-deaths [Accessed 12 July 2020].
- Nesvig, K. 2020. Reformation Founder Yael Aflalo Resigns after Allegations of Racism. TeenVogue, 14 June. https://www.teenvogue.com/story/reformation-founder-yael-aflalo-apologizes-for-past-racist-behavior [Accessed 11 December 2020].
- O’Connor, S. 2020. Leicester’s dark factories show up a diseased system. Financial Times, 4 July. https://www.ft.com/content/0b26ee5d-4f4f-4d57-a700-ef49038de18c [Accessed 12 July 2020].
- Ong, A., and Collier, S., 2005. Global assemblages: technology, politics, and ethics as anthropological problems. Oxford: Blackwell.
- Patrona, M., ed. 2018. Crisis and the media: narratives of crisis across cultural settings and media genres. London: John Benjamins Publishing Company.
- Pham, M.T. 2017. The High Cost of High Fashion. Jacobin, 13 June. https://www.jacobinmag.com/2017/06/fast-fashion-labor-prada-gucci-abuse-designer [Accessed 11 July 2020].
- Politzer, M. 2020. ‘We are on our own’: Bangladesh's pregnant garment workers face the sack. The Guardian, 9 July. https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2020/jul/09/we-are-on-our-own-bangladeshs-pregnant-garment-workers-face-the-sack [Accessed 24 July 2020].
- Saha, P., 2019. An empire of touch: women's Political labor and the fabrication of East Bengal. New York: Columbia University Press.
- Samman, A., 2015. Crisis theory and the historical imagination. Review of international political economy, 22 (5), 966–995.
- Uddin, M. 2020. Why fashion must help Bangladeshi workers survive coronavirus. Business of Fashion, 21 March. https://www.businessoffashion.com/articles/opinion/op-ed-why-fashion-must-help-factories-and-their-workers-survive-coronavirus [Accessed 12 April 2020].
- Wright, R., and Nillson, P. 2020. How Boohoo came to rule the roost in Leicester’s underground textile trade. Financial Times, 11 July. https://www.ft.com/content/bbe5dfc5-3b5c-41d2-9637-50e91c58b26b [Accessed 23 July 2020].