Globalization and economic liberalization are enabling individuals in emerging economies like India to access lifestyles similar to the resource-intense West. This spread of consumerism poses substantial ecological challenges, and calls for studies that investigate the environmental values, ethics, and politics of India\u27s new consumers. In this paper, I explore emerging pro-environmental behaviors in the city of Bangalore, India, among the new middle classes- its most significant consumer class. Using the case of home waste management, I show how household behavior change is made possible by neighborhood-based coordination, involving multiple actors such as environmentally-conscious residents, domestic help, and hired waste workers. Draw...
Safely managed waste reuse may be a sustainable way to protect human health and livelihoods in agrar...
Safely managed waste reuse may be a sustainable way to protect human health and livelihoods in agrar...
This paper explores the potential of a range of peri-urban environmentalisms to come together in sup...
My dissertation examines the environmental politics of the new middle classes of India through a stu...
Sustainability scholarship is increasingly focusing on individual behavior change and sustainable co...
This paper nuances the perspective of the Indian middle class as conspicuous consumers who have inhe...
Carol Upadhya suggests that changes in Bangalore’s social composition and political economy have not...
The editorial introduction by Christine Lutringer and Shalini Randeria delineates the overarching th...
The expansion of the new middle classes in Bangalore, particularly in conjunction with global labour...
In 2012, Bangalore was the first Indian metropolitan city to adopt a comprehensive solid waste manag...
Stewardship as a concept is increasingly brought forward as a goal to reach sustainability goals of ...
The development of strategies to encourage more sustainable approaches to resource consumption is a...
In India, you can still find the kabaadiwala, the rag-and-bone man. He wanders from house to house b...
Safely managed waste reuse may be a sustainable way to protect human health and livelihoods in agrar...
Safely managed waste reuse may be a sustainable way to protect human health and livelihoods in agrar...
Safely managed waste reuse may be a sustainable way to protect human health and livelihoods in agrar...
This paper explores the potential of a range of peri-urban environmentalisms to come together in sup...
My dissertation examines the environmental politics of the new middle classes of India through a stu...
Sustainability scholarship is increasingly focusing on individual behavior change and sustainable co...
This paper nuances the perspective of the Indian middle class as conspicuous consumers who have inhe...
Carol Upadhya suggests that changes in Bangalore’s social composition and political economy have not...
The editorial introduction by Christine Lutringer and Shalini Randeria delineates the overarching th...
The expansion of the new middle classes in Bangalore, particularly in conjunction with global labour...
In 2012, Bangalore was the first Indian metropolitan city to adopt a comprehensive solid waste manag...
Stewardship as a concept is increasingly brought forward as a goal to reach sustainability goals of ...
The development of strategies to encourage more sustainable approaches to resource consumption is a...
In India, you can still find the kabaadiwala, the rag-and-bone man. He wanders from house to house b...
Safely managed waste reuse may be a sustainable way to protect human health and livelihoods in agrar...
Safely managed waste reuse may be a sustainable way to protect human health and livelihoods in agrar...
Safely managed waste reuse may be a sustainable way to protect human health and livelihoods in agrar...
This paper explores the potential of a range of peri-urban environmentalisms to come together in sup...