Conceptualizing sustainable consumption: Toward an integrative framework
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In: Sustainability: Science, Practice, and Policy, Vol. 10, No. 1, 01.04.2014, p. 45-61.
Research output: Journal contributions › Journal articles › Research › peer-review
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Conceptualizing sustainable consumption
T2 - Toward an integrative framework
AU - Di Giulio, Antonietta
AU - Fischer, Daniel
AU - Schäfer, Martina
AU - Blättel-Mink, Birgit
PY - 2014/4/1
Y1 - 2014/4/1
N2 - Consumption and sustainability are complex issues—they cannot be reduced to the choice of consumer goods or to “green consumption.” Doing so would neglect the multifaceted embeddedness of consumer acts and the multidimensionality of sustainability. To understand patterns of consumption and move them toward sustainability means dealing with this double complexity. A coherent reference framework is therefore needed, to enable locating and correlating research questions, theories, and findings. Such a framework should provide a basis for interdisciplinary understanding, mutual acknowledgment, and collaborative knowledge creation. Therefore, it needs to be the result of an integrative approach; otherwise it would not allow a wide variety of disciplines to work with it. This article presents such a framework, developed in the course of an interdisciplinary process in a research program. In this process, the researchers of the focal topic asked four questions: 1) How can consumption be conceptualized? 2) How can consumption and sustainability be related? 3) How can sustainable consumption be assessed? and 4) How can changes to individual consumption be motivated? The article condenses the researchers’ overall answers to these questions into four complementary core statements capturing the key elements of the reference framework and concludes by sketching the framework’s benefits for future research.
AB - Consumption and sustainability are complex issues—they cannot be reduced to the choice of consumer goods or to “green consumption.” Doing so would neglect the multifaceted embeddedness of consumer acts and the multidimensionality of sustainability. To understand patterns of consumption and move them toward sustainability means dealing with this double complexity. A coherent reference framework is therefore needed, to enable locating and correlating research questions, theories, and findings. Such a framework should provide a basis for interdisciplinary understanding, mutual acknowledgment, and collaborative knowledge creation. Therefore, it needs to be the result of an integrative approach; otherwise it would not allow a wide variety of disciplines to work with it. This article presents such a framework, developed in the course of an interdisciplinary process in a research program. In this process, the researchers of the focal topic asked four questions: 1) How can consumption be conceptualized? 2) How can consumption and sustainability be related? 3) How can sustainable consumption be assessed? and 4) How can changes to individual consumption be motivated? The article condenses the researchers’ overall answers to these questions into four complementary core statements capturing the key elements of the reference framework and concludes by sketching the framework’s benefits for future research.
KW - Sustainability Science
KW - Consumer groups
KW - Interdisciplinary research
KW - Quality of life
KW - Social behavior
UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/e91a6bde-3a3d-399e-9dc0-d3e97bf18c50/
U2 - 10.1080/15487733.2014.11908124
DO - 10.1080/15487733.2014.11908124
M3 - Journal articles
VL - 10
SP - 45
EP - 61
JO - Sustainability: Science, Practice, and Policy
JF - Sustainability: Science, Practice, and Policy
SN - 1548-7733
IS - 1
ER -