Challenging Consumption: Pathways to a more Sustainable Future
ISBN: 9780203386026
Platform/Publisher: Taylor & Francis / Routledge
Digital rights: Users: Unlimited; Printing: Unlimited; Download: Unlimited

Subjects: Built Environment; Global Development; Economics Finance Business & Industry; Environment and Sustainability; Geography; Law; Politics & International Relations; Social Sciences; Energy; Sustainable Development; Environmental Studies; Conservation - Environment Studies; Environmental Policy; Environmental Change & Pollution; Environment & Resources; Environment & Economics; Environmental Law - Law; Environmental Politics; Planning; Economics; Business Management and Accounting; Environmental Management; Human Geography; Sociology & Social Policy; Energy policy and economics; Planning and Sustainability; Transport Planning; Environmental Economics; Climate Change; Resource Management - Environmental Studies; Environmental Geography; Marketing; Political Sociology; Sociology of Culture;


Sustainable consumption is a central research topic in academic discourses of sustainable development and global environmental change. Informed by a number of disciplinary perspectives, this book is structured around four key themes in sustainable consumption research: Living, Moving, Dwelling and Futures. The collection successfully balances theoretical insights with grounded case studies, on mobility, heating, washing and eating practices, and concludes by exploring future sustainable consumption research pathways and policy recommendations. Theoretical frameworks are advanced throughout the volume, especially in relation to social practice theory, theories of behavioural change and innovative visioning and backcasting methodologies.

Thisnbsp;groundbreaking book draws on some conceptual approaches which move beyond the responsibility of the individual consumer to take into account wider social, economic and political structures and processes in order to highlight both possibilities for and challenges to sustainable consumption. This approach enables students and policy-makers alike to easily recognise the applicability of social science theories.


Anna R. Davies is a Professor of Geography in Trinity College Dublin, Ireland.

Frances Fahy is a lecturer in Environmental Geography at the National University of Ireland, Galway.

Henrike Rau is a lecturer in Political Science and Sociology at the National University of Ireland, Galway.

hidden image for function call