This study looks at ways of acquiring, using and disposing of goods 'outside' the formal economy, focusing on three examples of reclamation practices: (1) giving and receiving goods free of charge via online reuse networks; (2) collecting and redistributing unwanted fruit from public and private spaces; and (3) reclaiming discarded food from supermarket bins. A central concern is with the relationship between everyday life and social change: how can engagement in these alternative yet mundane practices be conceptualised as a way to secure wider change? The research engages with and contributes to several intersecting debates, including: the relationship between 'alternative' and 'mainstream' economies; understandings of how new ways of doin...
This paper advances geographical perspectives on household sustainability by extending the range of ...
In an era where global climate change, ecological degradation and the depletion of natural resources...
Two significant realms of social anxiety, visible in the discourses of media and public policy, pote...
Waste has often been a target of literature and policy promoting pro-environmental behaviour. Howeve...
This thesis examines the relationships people have with rubbish in everyday life. Focusing on domes...
Purpose – This paper aims to explore the diverse and complementary resistance and waste‐reduction p...
Online reuse networks seek to reduce waste by connecting people who have something they no longer wa...
This thesis examines the relationships people have with rubbish in everyday life. Focusing on domest...
This research calls for a reconsideration of the notion of rubbish; one that does not consider dispo...
In studies of consumption, social theories of practice foreground the purchasing and use of resource...
This thesis offers a sociological analysis of food waste as a social issue of importance. Alongside ...
This article considers the relationships between consumption, the environment, and wider sociologica...
In this paper, we look at repair as an emergent focus of recent activism in affluent societies, wher...
University of Technology, Sydney. Institute for Sustainable Futures.This thesis concerns the practic...
Approaches to enhancing sustainability have largely focused on altering individual consumption behav...
This paper advances geographical perspectives on household sustainability by extending the range of ...
In an era where global climate change, ecological degradation and the depletion of natural resources...
Two significant realms of social anxiety, visible in the discourses of media and public policy, pote...
Waste has often been a target of literature and policy promoting pro-environmental behaviour. Howeve...
This thesis examines the relationships people have with rubbish in everyday life. Focusing on domes...
Purpose – This paper aims to explore the diverse and complementary resistance and waste‐reduction p...
Online reuse networks seek to reduce waste by connecting people who have something they no longer wa...
This thesis examines the relationships people have with rubbish in everyday life. Focusing on domest...
This research calls for a reconsideration of the notion of rubbish; one that does not consider dispo...
In studies of consumption, social theories of practice foreground the purchasing and use of resource...
This thesis offers a sociological analysis of food waste as a social issue of importance. Alongside ...
This article considers the relationships between consumption, the environment, and wider sociologica...
In this paper, we look at repair as an emergent focus of recent activism in affluent societies, wher...
University of Technology, Sydney. Institute for Sustainable Futures.This thesis concerns the practic...
Approaches to enhancing sustainability have largely focused on altering individual consumption behav...
This paper advances geographical perspectives on household sustainability by extending the range of ...
In an era where global climate change, ecological degradation and the depletion of natural resources...
Two significant realms of social anxiety, visible in the discourses of media and public policy, pote...