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Anna Therese Day
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Anna Therese Day is an independent journalist and social media researcher, specializing in global civil society organizing. She is a 2013 Fulbright Fellow, a 2012 UN Press Fellow and was named one of Google Zeitgeist’s top 30 Great Young Minds of Our Time in 2011. On the ground in Bahrain, Egypt, Israel, Jordan, Lebanon, Libya, the Palestinian Territories, and Turkey, her coverage focuses on American foreign policy, women’s issues, and youth organizing. Her work has been featured in a variety of media outlets, including CNN International, the BBC, Al Jazeera English, and numerous print outlets, translated into Arabic, English, Hebrew, and Spanish. Day is a founding board member of The Frontline Freelance Register, a representative body for freelance conflict journalists, by freelance conflict journalists. You can follow her on-the-ground at @AnnaOfArabia on Twitter or at www.AnnaThereseDay.com.

Entries by Anna Therese Day

Eyes on #NYFW

(1) Comments | Posted September 8, 2013 | 1:41 PM

Fashion is at its best when it is art. And art is at its best when it shakes, when it provokes a crisis in its audience, when it inspires reflection, action, maybe even a little discomfort... when it galvanizes a movement. That's why this year at New York Fashion Week, I'm proud to be a board member of Modavanti.com, the destination for ethically-made eco-friendly fashion for our generation of socially conscious fashionistas. In a time when the institution of #NYFW is being rightly challenged for its lack of diversity of body type and race as well as its lack of ethical manufacturing standards, I am humbled and energized by the ingenuity and success of my colleagues David Dietz and Jesse Ayala Jr., the co-founders of Modavanti.com, the visionaries behind what has become a new #NYFW institution.

"The future of fashion is sustainability, and yet, even though the industry has made considerable progress in adopting a more sustainable outlook, we still need a Revolution. It's about time we build a sustainable fashion movement," says CEO and co-founder David Dietz. Through their "triple bottom line"-approach, Dietz and Director of Operations, Adam Clancy, have created a business model that embraces people, planet and profit -- ensuring that all of Modavanti's products respect the dignity of the worker and the environment, while sustaining the operations of the Modavanti team in New York.

In a year where the deaths of over 1,000 garment workers in Bangladesh revealed that the West's demand for cheap product literally kills, the need for a solutions-based approach like Modavanti could not be more pressing or timely. Furthermore, as many American brands like GAP, Macy's, JCPenney and Walmart, continue to insult, violate and shamelessly spit on the rights of women workers abroad, players like Modavanti represent a refreshingly subversive and outspoken voice in an industry desperately in need of new leadership and innovation.

New Yorkers may have seen Modavanti already this week around town, as they kicked off this year's fashion week with a series of guerilla fashion shows in several locations throughout the city. Modavanti's Creative Department, which secured the combined talents of Sarah Craft, Colin Eadie and Bryn Terrell for its founding team, is led by renowned Brooklyn-based artist, Jesse Ayala Jr. and has emerged as the leading e-commerce site for sustainable fashion in just one year.

"It's moving to work not only with such a dynamic, visionary team, but also on a project that has the potential to change the discourse on style and disrupt the entire industry," reflects Creative Director, Jesse Ayala Jr., known among his cult-like followers as "the curator of The Revolution."

With online destinations like Modavanti.com, we no longer need to compromise our values for style. That's why my eyes are on #NYFW this year: standing with the new generation of leaders and artists like the team of Modavanti and scrutinizing those competitors dangerously stuck in the past. As the slogan of Modavanti goes, #JoinTheFuture, #JoinTheMovement, #ForwardFashion.

Now that's sexy! ;)


Elizabeth Cline, author of Overdressed: The Shockingly High Cost of Cheap Fashion, talks about what's changed in the garment industry since the devastating fire in Bangladesh earlier this year, and, just in time for NY fashion week, look at the growth of eco-friendly, worker-friendly fashion trends on The Leonard Lopate...

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We Are Freelancers -- Expect Us

(0) Comments | Posted June 10, 2013 | 3:51 PM

A message on behalf of The Frontline Freelance Register board

The combination of economic crisis and heightened security risk is diminishing the quality of foreign news coverage. Important stories, particularly in the realm of international news, are not getting the coverage they warrant. International journalists, particularly freelancers, are...

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We the Peoples of the United Nations: Civilian Carnage in Syria Illuminates Need for UN Structural Reform

(7) Comments | Posted October 12, 2012 | 3:21 PM

It was 1960 when the opening of the UN General Assembly last grasped the attention of the world's audience. Amidst the Cold War fog, leaders from across the globe descended on Midtown Manhattan for their shot in the spotlight of the world's stage. The star-studded cast included the usual U.S.-Soviet...

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Radical Allies and Moderate Subversives: U.S. Foreign Policy Threatens America's Interests in the Gulf

(36) Comments | Posted September 13, 2012 | 5:44 PM

Just weeks ago, Nabeel Rajab, the "Gandhi of Bahrain," spent his birthday in a prison cell. Originally "jailed for a tweet," Rajab, the renowned president of the Bahrain Center for Human Rights, now faces up to three years in prison for allegedly inciting violence among protesters against the...

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