1st Edition

Social and Cultural Aspects of the Circular Economy Toward Solidarity and Inclusivity

Edited By Viktor Pál Copyright 2022
    226 Pages 11 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    226 Pages 11 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    This collection of essays brings together discussions arguing that the circular economy must be linked to society and culture in order to create a viable concept for remodelling the economy. Covering a diverse range of topics and regions, including cities and living, food and human waste, packaging and law, fashion, design and art, this book provides a multi-layered examination of circularity.

    Transitioning to a circular economy, reducing resource input and waste, and narrowing material and energy loops are becoming an increasingly important targets to combat decades of unsustainable models of consumption. However, they will require a significant shift in social and cultural thinking and these dimensions have not yet been factored into policy debates and frameworks. While recognising the key role of individual consumers and their behaviours, the book goes beyond this singular perspective to provide equal focus on institutional and political structures as necessary drivers for real change.

    Social and Cultural Aspects of the Circular Economy argues for a social and solidarity economy (SSE) to combine individual actions with a wider cultural shift. It will be an important read for scholars, researchers, students and policy-makers in the circular economy, waste studies, consumption and other environmentally focused social sciences.

    1. Social and cultural aspects of circular economy: Toward solidarity and inclusivity

    Viktor Pál

    2. Transitioning to the circular economy: Shifting from a technical to a cultural perspective

    Marileena Mäkelä, Tiina Onkila, Satu Teerikangas, Milla Sarja, Mira Valkjärvi, and Katariina Koistinen

    3. Filling the social gap in the circular economy: How can the solidarity economy contribute to urban circularity?

    Raysa França, Erkki-Jussi Nylén, Ari Jokinen, and Pekka Jokinen

    4. Towards a socially inclusive circular economy: A study of tenant engagement in European social housing organisations

    Halima Sacranie and Sultan Çetin

    5. How does the circular economy interact with urban food system transformation?

    Carlos Miret

    6. Human waste: Why what seems naturally circular frequently is not

    Iris Borowy

    7. Power and responsibility in transition to sustainable food packaging

    Kirsi Sonck-Rautio, Sanne Bor, Greg O’Shea, Nina Tynkkynen, Vilja Varho, and Maria Åkerman

    8. Throwaway culture and the circular economy: Lifespan concepts in regulation

    Taina Pihlajarinne

    9. Assessing through a gender-inclusion lens the social impact of circular strategies in the apparel value chain: The Dutch case

    Lis Suarez-Visbal, Claudia Stuckrath, and Jesús Rosales Carreón

    10. From global problem to local solution: How a future directed circular economy can foster social change

    Sabine Lettmann and Pia Schmoeckel

    11. Contemporary art and cosmovisions of Brazilian Indigenous peoples: Potential influence on CE and SSE practices?

    Luciana Benetti Marques Valio

    12. Beyond circularity: Do we need to shrink and share?

    David Ness

    Biography

    Viktor Pál is a Researcher at the Department of Cultures at the University of Helsinki, Finland and has the title of Docent at the University of Tampere, Finland. He also serves as Coordinator at the Helsinki Environmental Humanities Hub.