"Sustainable Luxury and Jewelry brings together a variety of authors who generally provide well-researched perspectives on the nature of luxury and craftsmanship in the twenty-first century ... . As Pandora announces it will launch its laboratory-grown diamond pieces in the USA and jewelers boycott Russian diamonds following its invasion of Ukraine, those who are concerned with sustainable luxury will find much to ponder in this monograph." (Lynda Lawson, The Journal of Gemmology, Vol. 38 (3), 2022)
Encoding values and practices in ethical jewellery purchasing: A study of Italian ethical luxury consumption in an ethical jewellery store.
Disrupting the Chain: The Luxury of Craftsmanship
Brazilian contemporary jewelry: natural raw materials in the artwork of Ivete Maria Cattani
Viable Pearls and Seashells: Marine-culture and Sustainable Luxury in Broome, Western Australia
Precious Sustainability of the Tanzanite Supply Chain
Making sustainable Cultural Heritage the norm at MOTCHÉ
DiAi Designs: Creating Responsible Jewellery via Ethical Sourcing
See Through the Luxury Jewelry Supply Chain- New Methodology for Sustainable Practices
Jewelry Design in the Luxury Sector: Artistry, Craft, Technology and Sustainability
TRESOR NOIR: Five stars daydream : Black pearls and Tresor Noir
Sustainable supply chain process of Kente textile: introducing heritage into the sustainability framework
Luxury and sustainability: an experimental investigation concerning the diamond industry
Sustainability and luxury in jewellery industry: emerging dimensions from a text-mining analysis
Sustainable industrialisation for luxury products: manufacturers and retailers must commit to tackling modern slavery in Africa
The Sabyasachi Case
Dr. Ivan Coste-Manière is the Program Director of Luxury & Fashion Management at SKEMA Business School. His specialties include marketing, communication and international luxury goods management. He has managed the R&D of several multinational groups, and founded several companies in the areas of cosmetics and perfumes, luxury goods, PR and events, and pharmaceuticals. He has been a section member of the French Economic and Social Council, and Deputy Mayor of the city of Grasse for ten years. He has been President, with Prince Albert II of Monaco, of the Track and Field Association: Celebrities for Sports and Charities, while co-chairing the Center for Sustainable Luxury, and works as a consultant for several well-known luxury brands. He holds a Ph.D. in Chemistry, is an Engineer of the Ecole Centrale Marseille, and has been awarded the Gold Medal (Ministry of Youth and Sports) and the Officier des Palmes Académiques Medal by the Ministry of Research and Education. He is member of the Economic, Social and Environnemental Council Region Sud, of the board of the Comité Français Pierre de Coubertin, Vice Président of the Association Francophone des Académies Olympiques and a distinguished speaker in numerous countries and prestigious institutions and conferences.
Miguel Angel Gardetti (Ph.D.), founded the Centre for Study of Sustainable Luxury, first initiative of its kind in the world with an academic/research profile. He is also the founder and director of the “Award for Sustainable Luxury in Latin America”. For his contributions in this field, he was granted the “Sustainable Leadership Award (academic category),” in February, 2015 in Mumbai (India). He is an active member of the Global Compact in Argentina –which is a United Nations initiative-, and was a member of its governance body –the Board of The Global Compact, Argentine Chapter - for two terms. He was also part of the task force that developed the “Management Responsible Education Principles” of the United Nations Global Compact. This task force was made up of over 55 renowned academics worldwide pertaining to top Business Schools. He has several publications in the sustainable luxury arena.
This book discusses the current trends in luxury and jewelry and presents how to make these sustainable for a better future. In the age of sustainability, we increasingly see how designers and consumers begin to think beyond a product's look&feel and operation, and are especially concerned about what has happened during its manufacturing process and what will happen once its useful life comes to an end. Today, consumers value that every industrial product and process should be sustainable, beneficial for the people, the economy and the planet, and so is the case for jewelry.