Editorial: Sustainable consumption and care
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Notice bibliographique
Résumé
Research on care and sustainable consumption is fragmented. Research on care has its origins in feminist scholarship, first developed in relation to health. More recently, care has been extended to environmental and sustainability studies. Research on sustainable consumption and care can be broadly divided into four categories. A first strand of work is concerned with whether ethical consumption can allow caring relationships to flourish. A second strand looks at sustainability in the context of parenting, focussing on gender relations and caring activities, in which health overshadows sustainability. A third body of work is concerned with the ways in which inconspicuous consumption is intertwined with care activities, for example in food or energy consumption, mobility and leisure activities. Finally, the fourth strand considers care as a dimension of geographical communities or communities of interest that supports sustainability and resilience. This collection of papers highlights care as a fundamental yet undervalued component of sustainable consumption. From household practices to broader societal transformations, care emerges as both a practical and an ethical lens through which to understand and address sustainability. Gender dynamics, time use, community building, and social justice are recurring themes that argue for rethinking sustainability in relational rather than transactional terms. The nine contributions to this research topic are organised around two groups of papers. The first group considers care as a set of practices or activities that support or hinder the transition towards more sustainable forms of consumption. The second group outlines pathways towards care-centred societies.The first group is composed of four papers. In their paper "The cultural practice of decluttering as household work and its potentials for sustainable consumption", Muster, Iran and Münsch show how the current trend of decluttering and minimalist lifestyles is a form of self-care and caring for the household. While opening households towards more sustainable modes of consumption, it also runs the risk of being reclaimed by the consumerist ideology of constant accumulation and leading to an increase in consumption. In "Care, gender, and change in the study of sustainable consumption: A critical review of the literature", Godin and Langlois show that transforming consumption often means interfering with established routines, practices and activities of care. Thus, transforming household practices towards more sustainable forms of consumption risks further entrenching existing and persistent gender inequalities in the distribution of care work. They thus propose a reduction and redistribution of care work. Smetschka, Gaube and Mader come to similar conclusions in their paper "Time to care-Care for time-How spending more time for care than consumption helps to mitigate climate change". Based on an analysis of time-use data in Austria, they show how men's and women's time-use patterns are shaped by the gendered division of care work and how this affects their respective carbon footprints, particularly in relation to time prosperity or pressure. Finally, "Social ties and sustainability in neighbourhood canteens: A care-based approach", Dyen and Michaud draw on "third spaces" and ethnographic fieldwork conducted in two neighbourhood canteens in France to show how participation in such collective and community-building spaces is driven either by a desire to receive care, a desire to give care, with both impulses often occurring simultaneously.Five papers address pathways towards care-centred societies. In "Who cares (for whom)?", Spangenberg and Lorek argue that in order to solve the current care deficit, which is largely caused by an unequal distribution of care work, and to ensure social reproduction and thriving communities, profound transformation is needed in [terms of] the institutional recognition of care work. In their perspective paper "Towards care-centred societies", they then highlight the differences between various types of care work, and discuss how the distribution of paid and unpaid care work affects sustainable development. In his paper "Toward sustainable wellbeing: Advances in contemporary concepts", O'Mahony mobilizes care as a tool to better integrate nature and the environment into the concept of wellbeing, arguing for a more collective, relational and systemic approach. In looking at "Sustainable consumption, resonance, and care", Wahlen and Stroude turn to the concept of resonance to think about care in relation to people and politics, things, and collective singulars, to suggest that thinking about care as an experience of resonance can help to redefine the role and place of consumption. Finally, in their paper titled "Using the Theory of Protected Needs to conceptualize sustainability as 'caring for human wellbeing': An empirical confirmation of the theory's potential", Di Giulio, Defila and Ruesch Schweizer describe how communitylevel practices of care foster social ties, resilience and sustainable systems, demonstrating the interconnectedness of individuals and society, and the systemic transformations needed to institutionalise care as a foundation for sustainable and equitable societies.As a whole, this research topic explores care as a transformative lens for sustainable consumption, emphasising its relational and systemic dimensions. From individual practices such as decluttering and time management to community-building efforts in shared spaces, care emerges as the linchpin that connects personal actions to broader societal goals. By prioritising empathy, justice and relational well-being, the contributions highlight the need for structural changes to elevate the role of care in our economies and policies. Current frameworks undervalue care, and place a disproportionate burden on women and marginalised groups. A care-centred approach requires an equitable redistribution of responsibilities, challenging traditional gender norms and ensuring inclusion. Crucially, care offers a narrative for sustainability that resonates with everyday experience, linking ecological action with human wellbeing. This perspective reorients sustainability from an abstract goal to a shared societal responsibility that nurtures both people and the planet. Future research should deepen the understanding of the transformative potential of care in promoting inclusive, just and sustainable societies.
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| Catégorie | Codex | Gemma |
|---|---|---|
| Métarecherche | 0,002 | 0,010 |
| Méta-épidémiologie (sens strict) | 0,001 | 0,001 |
| Méta-épidémiologie (sens large) | 0,001 | 0,000 |
| Bibliométrie | 0,001 | 0,001 |
| Études des sciences et des technologies | 0,000 | 0,001 |
| Communication savante | 0,001 | 0,002 |
| Science ouverte | 0,001 | 0,002 |
| Intégrité de la recherche | 0,002 | 0,002 |
| Charge utile insuffisante (le modèle a refusé de juger) | 0,000 | 0,000 |
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