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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Maurie Cohen (New Jersey Institute of Technology, USA) , Halina Szejnwald Brown (Clark University, USA) , Philip Vergragt (Clark University, USA)Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Weight: 0.460kg ISBN: 9780367030216ISBN 10: 0367030217 Pages: 234 Publication Date: 08 January 2019 Audience: College/higher education , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly , Undergraduate Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of Contents"I. Consumption and Social Change: An Introductory Discussion and Synthetic Framework 1. Introduction, Halina Szejnwald Brown II. Niches of Social Innovation 2. The New Sharing Economy: Enacting the Eco-habitus 3. Toward a More Solidaristic Sharing Economy: Examples from Switzerland 4. Social Change at the Nexus of Consumption and Politics: A Case Study of Local Food Movements 5. Institutionalization Processes in Transformative Social Innovation: Capture Dynamics in the Social Solidarity Economy and Basic Income Initiatives 6. Consumption and Social Change: Sustainable Lifestyles in Times of Economic Crisis III. Post-consumerist Transitions 7. Learning from History: When ""Gestures of Change"" Demand Policy Support 8. Finance: An Emerging Issue in Sustainable Consumption Research 9. Beyond ""GDP"" Indicators: Changing the Economic Narrative for a Post-consumerist Society? 10. Consumption, Governance, and Transitions: How Reconnecting Consumption and Production Opens Up New Perspectives for Sustainable Development IV. Social Change Toward Post-consumer Society 11. Conclusion and Outlook"ReviewsClimate change, water shortages, and toxins in our food, air, and water. Loneliness and depression. Erosion of traditional values. These are among the problems that experts tell us we must solve for humanity to thrive, or even survive. However, these threats are symptoms of a deeper pathology, namely the desire for endless growth in consumption and the substitution of material goods for human relationships. This book sets out theory to understand how this came to be and what might be done about it, from an explicitly multidisciplinary perspective. The book also provides compelling accounts of exciting experiments in sustainable consumption now underway as people around the world seek to live within the limits of our finite planet, and in so doing, restore and heal our environment, our institutions, our communities, and ourselves. - John D. Sterman, Jay W. Forrester Professor of Management and Director of the System Dynamics Group, Sloan School of Management, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA This fine collection focuses on the relationship between consumption and satisfaction, demonstrating how the economic culture of consumerism causes ecological damage, wasteful use of resources, and mindless yearning for distinction that is mistaken as the utter enjoyment of freedom. The book explores examples and strategies of interstitial change unfolding in the niches of consumer societies, the pursuit of which is driven by both economic crises affecting households and radical ideas of socioeconomic change as well as change of lifestyles. With a balanced focus on both novel practices of consumption and the policies needed to facilitate and nurture them, this volume maps roads toward post-consumerism. - Claus Offe, Professor Emeritus of Political Sociology, Hertie School of Governance, Germany If we want a sustainable and healthy environment, it is essential to shift decisively from a hyper-consumerist society. However, we live in a capitalist economy and stable capitalism depends on consumerism. What is to be done in the face of such a sharp contradiction? Social Change and the Coming of Post-consumer Society explores a wide range of approaches to this question. This book marks an important contribution to this area of inquiry. - Erik Olin Wright, Professor of Sociology, University of Wisconsin and former President of the American Sociological Association, USA How do we transform political and economic structures in order to allow everyone to live meaningful lives with less intensive forms of consumption? Where do we start, and who will do the job? These are defining questions during an era of secular stagnation and impending climate disaster, and this book provides an important contribution in the quest for viable solutions. - Giorgos Kallis, ICREA Professor, ICTA-Autonomous University of Barcelona, Spain Based on multiple case studies and theories of change, this book argues that the foundational pillars of consumer society are faltering. Drawing on a shared set of theories-from transition management to Karl Polanyi's embeddedness theorems-the volume contends that without deep changes in macroeconomic and political orientations, and mechanisms that escape current lock-ins, it will not be possible to achieve broad sociocultural change. The message is not of certainty or desperation, but rather of hope. By appealing to deeper values, broad change is possible. A must read for activists as much as for sustainability and consumption researchers. - Joachim Spangenberg, Vice-Chair, Sustainable Europe Research Institute, Germany Climate change, water shortages, and toxins in our food, air, and water. Loneliness and depression. Erosion of traditional values. These are among the problems that experts tell us we must solve for humanity to thrive, or even survive. However, these threats are symptoms of a deeper pathology, namely the desire for endless growth in consumption and the substitution of material goods for human relationships. This book sets out theory to understand how this came to be and what might be done about it, from an explicitly multidisciplinary perspective. The book also provides compelling accounts of exciting experiments in sustainable consumption now underway as people around the world seek to live within the limits of our finite planet, and in so doing, restore and heal our environment, our institutions, our communities, and ourselves. - John D. Sterman, Jay W. Forrester Professor of Management and Director of the System Dynamics Group, Sloan School of Management, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA This fine collection focuses on the relationship between consumption and satisfaction, demonstrating how the economic culture of consumerism causes ecological damage, wasteful use of resources, and mindless yearning for distinction that is mistaken as the utter enjoyment of freedom. The book explores examples and strategies of interstitial change unfolding in the niches of consumer societies, the pursuit of which is driven by both economic crises affecting households and radical ideas of socioeconomic change as well as change of lifestyles. With a balanced focus on both novel practices of consumption and the policies needed to facilitate and nurture them, this volume maps roads toward post-consumerism. - Claus Offe, Professor Emeritus of Political Sociology, Hertie School of Governance, Germany If we want a sustainable and healthy environment, it is essential to shift decisively from a hyper-consumerist society. However, we live in a capitalist economy and stable capitalism depends on consumerism. What is to be done in the face of such a sharp contradiction? Social Change and the Coming of Post-consumer Society explores a wide range of approaches to this question. This book marks an important contribution to this area of inquiry. - Erik Olin Wright, Professor of Sociology, University of Wisconsin and former President of the American Sociological Association, USA How do we transform political and economic structures in order to allow everyone to live meaningful lives with less intensive forms of consumption? Where do we start, and who will do the job? These are defining questions during an era of secular stagnation and impending climate disaster, and this book provides an important contribution in the quest for viable solutions. - Giorgos Kallis, ICREA Professor, ICTA-Autonomous University of Barcelona, Spain Based on multiple case studies and theories of change, this book argues that the foundational pillars of consumer society are faltering. Drawing on a shared set of theories-from transition management to Karl Polanyi's embeddedness theorems-the volume contends that without deep changes in macroeconomic and political orientations, and mechanisms that escape current lock-ins, it will not be possible to achieve broad sociocultural change. The message is not of certainty or desperation, but rather of hope. By appealing to deeper values, broad change is possible. A must read for activists as much as for sustainability and consumption researchers. - Joachim Spangenberg, Vice-Chair, Sustainable Europe Research Institute, Germany Author InformationMaurie J. Cohen is Professor of Sustainability Studies and Director of the Program in Science, Technology and Society in the Department of Humanities at the New Jersey Institute of Technology , USA. Halina Szejnwald Brown is Professor of Environmental Science and Policy at Clark University and a Fellow at the Tellus Institute, USA. Philip J. Vergragt is Professor Emeritus of Technology Assessment at Delft University, the Netherlands, and currently a Fellow at the Tellus Institute and a Research Fellow at Clark University, USA. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |