Consuming Values and Contested Cultures: A Critical Analysis of the UK Strategy for Sustainable Consumption and Production

The term “sustainable consumption” is subject to many interpretations, from Agenda 21's hopeful assertion that governments should encourage less materialistic lifestyles based on new definitions of “wealth” and “prosperity”, to the view prevalent in international policy discourse that green and ethical consumerism will be sufficient to transform markets to produce continual and “clean” economic growth. These different perspectives are examined using a conceptual framework derived from Cultural Theory, to illustrate their fundamentally competing beliefs about the nature of the environment and society, and the meanings attached to consumption. Cultural Theory argues that societies should develop pluralistic policies to include all perspectives. Using this framework, the paper examines the UK strategy for sustainable consumption, and identifies a number of failings in current policy. These are that the UK strategy is strongly biased towards individualistic, market-based and neo-liberal policies, so it can only respond to a small part of the problem of unsustainable consumption. Policy recommendations include measures to strengthen the input from competing cultures, to realize the potential for more collective, egalitarian and significantly less materialistic consumption patterns.

[1]  S. Ney,et al.  Consulting the frogs: The normative implications of cultural theory , 1999 .

[2]  Roger Lee,et al.  Alternative Economic Spaces , 2003 .

[3]  Laurie Michaelis,et al.  Policies for sustainable consumption , 2003 .

[4]  P Ekins,et al.  Human Choice and Climate Change, Volumes 1-4 - Rayner, S. & Malone, E. Eds., Battelle Press, Columbus, Ohio (Review) , 1999 .

[5]  From Frankenstein foods to Veggie box schemes : Sustainable consumption in cultural perspective , 2003 .

[6]  Gerald M. Steinberg,et al.  Risk and Culture: An Essay on the Selection of Technological and Environmental Dangers . By Mary Douglas and Aaron Wildavsky. (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1982. Pp. 224. $14.95.) , 1984 .

[7]  L. Lovins,et al.  Factor Four – Doubling Wealth, Halving Resource Use , 1997, Energy Exploration & Exploitation.

[8]  E. Elliott Risk and Culture: An Essay on the Selection of Technical and Environmental Dangers , 1983 .

[9]  R. Douthwaite Short Circuit: Strengthening Local Economies for Security in an Unstable World , 1996 .

[10]  Gill Seyfang,et al.  Growing cohesive communities one favour at a time: social exclusion, active citizenship and time banks , 2003 .

[11]  M. Maniates,et al.  Individualization: Plant a Tree, Buy a Bike, Save the World? , 2001, Global Environmental Politics.

[12]  B. Fine The World of Consumption: The Material and Cultural Revisited , 1993 .

[13]  E. F. Schumacher,et al.  Small is Beautiful: A Study of Economics as if People Mattered , 1974 .

[14]  M. Lutz Future wealth: a new economics for the 21st Century , 1990 .

[15]  M. Douglas,et al.  Risk and Culture: An Essay on the Selection of Technological and Environmental Dangers , 1983 .

[16]  Bjørn Lomborg,et al.  The Skeptical Environmentalist , 2001 .

[17]  Gill Seyfang,et al.  New Hope or False Dawn? , 2001 .

[18]  Gill Seyfang,et al.  Community Currencies: Small Change for a Green Economy , 2001 .

[19]  J. Kent,et al.  Towards Sustainable Consumption: a European Perspective , 2000 .

[20]  C. Sanne Willing consumers—or locked-in? Policies for a sustainable consumption , 2002 .

[21]  Conrad Lodziak The Myth Of Consumerism , 2002 .

[22]  Danny Miller,et al.  Acknowledging consumption : a review of new studies , 1997 .

[23]  M. Douglas,et al.  The World of Goods , 2021 .

[24]  Redefining prosperity: resource productivity, economic growth and sustainable development (SDC report) , 2004 .

[25]  Gill Seyfang,et al.  Working Outside the Box: Community Currencies, Time Banks and Social Inclusion , 2004, Journal of Social Policy.

[26]  Doug Brown Real-Life Economics: Understanding Wealth Creation , 1993 .

[27]  Changing Patterns UK Government Framework for Sustainable Consumption and Production , 2003 .

[28]  Adrian Smith,et al.  Transforming technological regimes for sustainable development: A role for alternative technology niches? , 2003 .