Clothing Europe: Comparative
Perspectives on Trade Liberalization and Production Networks
in the New European Clothing
Industry • October 15-16, 2004
On October
15-16th 2004, the Center for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian
Studies, the Center for European Studies and the
European Union Center, and the University Center for International
Studies hosted an international workshop and conference
on the European clothing industry. The workshop and conference
brought together researchers studying trade liberalization
and production networks in the global clothing industry with
policy
makers and other stakeholders from government, NGOs, and industry,
to explore the changing patterns of production and trade in
Central and Eastern Europe, and the roles played by national
and EU institutions
and markets in these changes as the industry adjusts to EU
accession and the completion of the integration of
clothing into
the WTO on January 1, 2005.
The workshop
and conference was organized around four key issues related
to industrial and regional restructuring
in the
clothing industry, and focused regionally on the EU
accession states of Central and Eastern Europe. Participants
paid particular attention to the ways in which locally
and regionally specific institutions, legacies, and norms
make a
difference in how the post-socialist European clothing industry
is being inserted into pan-European and global production
networks. The conference also developed comparative
perspectives on
these issues with presentations and papers on the consequences
of liberalization and industrial change for the North Carolina
(and U.S.) textiles and clothing industry, in order to better
understand the comparative dimensions of change in the clothing
industry and to compare lessons for communities at various
sites in the apparel production chain. See full conference
outline: Word | PDF
Organized
by John Pickles (UNC), Meenu Tewari (UNC), Gary Gereffi (Duke),
Adrian Smith (Queen Mary College, University of London)
|