Global Standard Glossary
There are 123 entries in this glossary.| Term | Definition |
|---|---|
| Standard Setting Procedure | The Standard Setting Procedure is a procedure by which the Standard Body establishes, reviews, and updates the criteria for the production, processing and labelling of certified textiles. |
| Standards Committee | Committee formed by GOTS to guide and advise the GOTS Management and the Advisory Council on matters related to GOTS. |
| Standards Revision Committee | A group of experts representing all aspects of the textile value chain and tasked with being the decisive committee for decisions on the revision of the GOTS Standard and its Implementation Manual. |
| Subcontractor | An entity in the supply chain of GOTS Goods performing job work (in the field of processing or manufacturing) for a Certified Entity without becoming the proprietor of the GOTS Goods. A Subcontractor may be independently certified to GOTS. |
| Substances | Chemical elements and their compounds as they occur in the natural state or as produced by industry. |
| Supplementary weight | The total weight of the following: |
| Sustainability | In 1987, the United Nations Brundtland Commission defined sustainability as “meeting the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs.” |
| Sustainable Development Goals | The Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), also known as the Global Goals, were adopted by the United Nations in 2015 as a universal call to action to end poverty, protect the planet, and ensure that by 2030, all people enjoy peace and prosperity. |
| Synthetic Microplastic Polymers | Polymers that are solid and which fulfil both of the following conditions: Following synthetic polymer microparticles, as substances on their own or in mixtures are exempted from the definition: Source: REACH restriction of synthetic polymer microparticles |
| Textiles for Babies | Textile products used for babies and small children up to the age of 36 months |
| Topical Products | Any device that does not penetrate inside the body, either through a body orifice or through the skin |
| Traceability | The ability to trace the origin of an object back to its source. |
| Trader | Entity trading with (=buying and selling) GOTS Goods in the supply chain between the producer of the fibre and the retail merchant of the final product regardless of whether the goods are physically received or not (e.g. an import, export or wholesale trading entity). |
| Transaction Certificate | A document issued by a GOTS-approved Certification Body for GOTS-certified products, verifying their compliance with the Standard. It provides traceability by listing product details, shipment information and confirming integrity through volume reconciliation process. |
| Transition Period | The time period between the publication of a new version of the Standard and its effective date. |
| Uncertified retailer | A B2C entity that sells GOTS-certified products to the end consumer, not engaged in repacking/relabelling/printing/cutting/any other processing, and that is is exempted from the certification. |
| Virtual audit | A a type of remote audit that is conducted entirely online, using virtual tools and platforms to assess compliance with the relevant Standard criteria. |
| Volume reconciliation | Calculation process by which it is ascertained that output volumes of a product’s certified materials are compatible with their corresponding input volumes. Input volume and output volume of the certified material used for a product are compatible if their ratio falls within a given percentage range, which reflects estimated production losses specific to the production process of the particular product, and if the input volume can be demonstrated to have been available on stock. |
| Wage Gap | The difference between average Living Wage and Average Wages Paid to |
| Waste Hierarchy | The Waste Hierarchy is the priority order of waste management options established in Article 4 of the EU Waste Framework Directive (Directive 2008/98/EC). It ranks waste prevention and management strategies from the most to the least environmentally preferred, with the aim of reducing overall environmental impact and promoting resource efficiency. |
| Wholly Owned Subsidiary | A subsidiary company is considered wholly owned when all of the common stock is owned by another company, the parent company. With a wholly owned subsidiary, the company's stock is not traded publicly. It remains an independent legal body, a corporation with its own organized framework and administration. Its day-to-day operations are likely directed entirely by the parent company, however. |
| Worker | Any individual engaged in work who is not a senior manager or owner. |
| Young Worker | A Worker who is older than the minimum age but less than 18 years old. |