A step towards ending animal abuse or another non-binding guideline?
Camera Nazionale della Moda Italiana (CNMI) has recently published new guidelines banning animal fur. Is it a crucial step toward eradicating animal abuse? Could be. But the guidelines are voluntary.
Animal fur: the new guidelines
Camera Moda released new regulations on animal fur. Starting from the next edition, September 2026, brands are invited to avoid presenting garments and accessories made from animal fur during Milano Fashion Week shows.
Notice the wording: invited, not required. This is no hard ban. No fines, no disqualification, no exclusion from the official calendar. Creative and entrepreneurial autonomy? Fully intact.

Voluntary by design, but why?
At first glance, a “voluntary ban” sounds like an oxymoron. If it’s voluntary, can we call it a ban at all?
Yet context matters. CNMI’s move doesn’t emerge from nowhere. It builds on a sustainability path the association started back in 2012, and it reflects a concrete legislative fact: Italy banned fur farming as of 2022. You can’t raise animals for fur on Italian soil anymore. Imported fur, however, remains perfectly legal.
So the guidelines sit in a strange in-between space. They echo the law’s spirit without enforcing it. They push toward ethical fashion without punishing those who resist.
Let’s not forget: animal fur is not a necessity. It never was — at least not in any modern context. In 2026, with exceptional faux fur, recycled materials, and innovative textiles on the market, using real fur is an aesthetic choice, not a functional one.
Italy no longer allows animals to be farmed for fur. That’s the law. CNMI’s guidelines simply ask: if we don’t raise them here, why should we showcase them here?
What changes, really?
For many major luxury brands, nothing changes. Gucci, Prada, Armani, Valentino, Versace — they all went fur-free years ago, often ahead of any industry guideline. For them, this is validation, not transformation.
For those still using fur, the message is softer: keep your autonomy, but know the runway is no longer neutral ground. Showing fur in September 2026 won’t get a brand kicked out of Fashion Week. But it might get you noticed — and not in a good way.
That’s the real lever here: reputation. In an industry built on image, reputational pressure can sometimes move faster than legislation. CNMI is betting that fashion houses care more about public perception than about sanctions.
A step or a trick?
Let’s be honest. A genuine ban would require oversight, enforcement, consequences. This has none of that. From a purely legal standpoint, it’s barely more than a strongly worded suggestion.
But here’s where it gets familiar.
If you’ve been following Italian fashion politics lately, you’ve seen this movie before. The voluntary nature of the fur guidelines echoes something much darker: the attempt to make labour exploitation voluntary too.
Remember Article 30 of the Small and Medium Enterprises Bill? Approved by the Senate, debated in the Chamber of Deputies, it tried to exempt major fashion brands from liability for crimes committed along their production chains. Human rights abuses. Wage theft. Caporalato — the gangmaster system that reduces workers to modern slaves.
Widely described as a legal shield for luxury brands, the amendment was eventually withdrawn following protests by trade unions, workers, and the Clean Clothes Campaign. It will now return to the Senate.
But the logic behind it never left: let brands decide for themselves whether to be responsible.
Final thoughts
In conclusion, what does the Camera Moda animal fur ban mean? Is this a definitive victory against animal abuse? No. Absolute bans are still rare, and voluntary guidelines won’t stop every brand.
The fur guidelines say: we invite you to be ethical, but no pressure.
Article 30 said: we invite you to monitor your supply chain, but if you don’t, don’t worry — you won’t be liable.
Same melody. Different verse.
No sanctions for fur. No liability for labour. In both cases, the system protects the brand, not the victim — whether that victim is an animal or a worker.
CNMI’s fur guidelines are not bad. They move the needle, however slightly. But they also reinforce a dangerous logic: the idea that the fashion industry should regulate itself voluntarily.
But if the fashion industry can be trusted to self-regulate on animal welfare, why not on human welfare?
Because we’ve already seen the answer. When given the chance to self-regulate on labour, major brands lobbied for a law that said: don’t hold us accountable.