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Transcript
Researching the Future: How
Can we Promote Sustainable
Consumption? Can we promote
sustainable
Prof Cathy Urquhart consumption?
Sustainable and Ethical Enterprise Group
the
Future: Can we promote
##esrcfestival #mmususcon
sustainable
Overview
• What are an organisations options when
choosing how to respond to a more
sustainable world?
• What do we mean by sustainable
consumption?
• What needs to happen in order to have
sustainable consumption ?
• What are the research needs of businesses
when it comes to sustainability?
2
Figure 1. CVF with
sustainability focus.
Source: Robbins and
Page (2012: 177)
Tuesday, May 23, 2017
3
Dilemma of Growth
• Growth is unsustainable, de-growth is unstable
• Downward pressure on employment, people lose
jobs, output of economy falls, public spending is
cut, ability to service public debt is diminished 
spiral of recession
Green New Deal
• Keynesian response – tax cuts and public spending to
stimulate consumer demand
• Economic recovery needs investment
• Target investment towards energy saving,
• Low carbon infrastructures and ecological protection
• Green stimulus offers jobs and economic recovery in the
short term, energy security and technological innovation in
the medium term and ultimately sustainability – still growth
• Need different macroeconomic structure
• …..
The (non segmented) Green consumer
McDonald et al 2012
• The consumption undertaken by private
households accounts for a large proportion of the
economy’s environmental impact (30-40%)
• Previous dichotomous classifications in
marketing literature, grey and green, recyclers
and non recyclers, etc
the consumption undertaken by
private households accounts for a
large proportion
of the economy’s environmental
6
Translators
• Translators are green in some aspects of their lives
and grey in others. They do not necessarily think
about sustainability in a holistic way. Not motivated
by a political agenda but by a sense of trying to do
what they perceive to be the right thing.
• If they are made aware of a concrete action that they
can take and they can see a clear benefit from doing
it, then they are apt to undertake it:
• Translators translate awareness into specific actions
Tuesday, May 23, 2017
7
Exceptors
• Lifestyle is likely to be underpinned by, and designed
to implement, a personal philosophy of consumption,
such as, ‘I don’t believe in consumerism’
• They all have at least one aspect of their lives in
which they behave like grey consumers. This
exception to their otherwise coherent sustainable
lifestyles is likely to be a relatively small but conscious
lapse into mainstream consumerism.
Tuesday, May 23, 2017
8
Selectors
• Selectors select an aspect of sustainable consumption
on which to focus. For example,
• They may be avid recyclers or pay a premium for
green energy or sponsor a child
• This group is attracted or motivated by a single issue
but is not interested in sustainability in a holistic way.
• Largest in terms of numbers
Tuesday, May 23, 2017
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10
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11
A critique of sustainable consumption
• First, economic elites redefine the nature of the problem
from political to one of individual consumption (for
example, global warming stems from consumers failing
to cultivate a sustainable lifestyle).
• Next, economic elites promote the idea that the only
viable solution is for consumers to change their
behavior.
• Third, new markets are created in order to turn this
solution into a material reality
Tuesday, May 23, 2017
12
“The responsible consumption myth promotes the
idea that governments can never achieve harmony
between competing economic and social or
environmental goals, and that this instead requires
a global community of morally enlightened
consumers who are empowered to make a
difference through the marketplace”
Markus Giesler and Ela
Veresiu 2014
Tuesday, May 23, 2017?
13
In Conclusion
• Organisations can focus internally or externally,
and on efficiency or innovation..the competing
values framework still holds
• The ‘green consumer’ is a complex beast not
necessarily amenable to simple segmentation
• There is a school of thought that the notion of
sustainable consumption shifts the responsibility
for sustainability on to individuals and markets
rather than society as a whole
Tuesday, May 23, 2017
14