The AP reports that the lower house of the French parliament has passed a bill that would criminalize the "public inciting of extreme thinness." This controversial (and totally unprecedented) law is aimed straight at the fashion industry—designers, magazines, and advertisers in particular—which has long genuflected before the image of über-skinny models as a beauty ideal. The bill has won approval from the French National Assembly and will be voted on by the Senate in the next few weeks. Violations could carry a $50,000 fine and up to a walloping two years in prison. Since the 2006 death of Ana Carolina Reston, a 5'8" model who struggled with eating disorders and eventually died of general infection after dropping to 88 pounds, the industry has been taking notice, and occasionally even action, to combat the widespread anorexia that dominates modeling. In 2007, Spain banned models with a body mass index of lower ...
Can You Bail Me Out? I Was Arrested for “Inciting Thinness”
France's bill to criminalize public inciting of extreme thinness targets fashion industry's role in promoting unhealthy body standards.
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