You're A Natural
Voluntary certifications draw a perimeter. We read the word inside it as the whole product. The same gap — between what a standard audits and what the shelf word implies — recurs across organic cotton, natural cosmetics, organic wine, and carbon-neutral airline tickets. In this episode, we debate: Is the gap between what voluntary certifications audit and what consumers read from the shelf word an unfixable structural feature of certification itself — or a navigable design problem that a three-question diagnostic makes solvable? We unpack 5 concepts you will need before reading the article: The Three-Question Diagnostic, The Four Drifts of "Organic", COSMOS-NATURAL and the Permitted Non-Natural, The Carbon-Neutral Remainder, and Architecture Not Conspiracy. This is part 3 of 3 in The Compost Problem series. Episode 1 ("The Dye Beneath") covered the chemistry. Episode 2 ("Where the Logo Ends") covered the rules. This episode asks whether the pattern is specific to cotton — or shows up everywhere voluntary certification meets a shelf word. Related episodes: The Dye Beneath, Where the Logo Ends, The Caddy Liner Topics: voluntary certification, organic labelling, GOTS, COSMOS natural cosmetics, carbon offsets, carbon neutral flying, audit scope, consumer trust, greenwashing, certification architecture, compost Read the full article: youreanatural.com/consumer-intelligence/the-hidden-half
51 episodios
Comentarios
0Sé la primera persona en comentar
¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de You're A Natural!