Ethical Consumption: Social Value and Economic Practice

Ethical Consumption: Social Value and Economic Practice

Ethical Consumption: Social Value and Economic Practice

Ethical Consumption: Social Value and Economic Practice

eBook

$26.49  $34.95 Save 24% Current price is $26.49, Original price is $34.95. You Save 24%.

Available on Compatible NOOK devices, the free NOOK App and in My Digital Library.
WANT A NOOK?  Explore Now

Related collections and offers


Overview

Increasingly, consumers in North America and Europe see their purchasing as a way to express to the commercial world their concerns about trade justice, the environment and similar issues. This ethical consumption has attracted growing attention in the press and among academics. Extending beyond the growing body of scholarly work on the topic in several ways, this volume focuses primarily on consumers rather than producers and commodity chains. It presents cases from a variety of European countries and is concerned with a wide range of objects and types of ethical consumption, not simply the usual tropical foodstuffs, trade justice and the system of fair trade. Contributors situate ethical consumption within different contexts, from common Western assumptions about economy and society, to the operation of ethical-consumption commerce, to the ways that people’s ethical consumption can affect and be affected by their social situation. By locating consumers and their practices in the social and economic contexts in which they exist and that their ethical consumption affects, this volume presents a compelling interrogation of the rhetoric and assumptions of ethical consumption.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780857453433
Publisher: Berghahn Books, Incorporated
Publication date: 03/01/2012
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 246
File size: 3 MB

About the Author

James G. Carrier is a Hon. Research Associate at Oxford Brookes University and Adjunct Professor of Anthropology at the University of Indiana. He has taught anthropology and sociology, and carried out research, in Papua New Guinea, the United States and the United Kingdom, as well as studying environmental conservation in Jamaica. His publications include Gifts and Commodities (Routledge 1995), Meanings of the Market (ed., Berg 1997) and Virtualism, Governance and Practice (co-ed. with West, Berghahn 2009).


Peter G. Luetchford is Senior Lecturer in Anthropology at the University of Sussex and has carried out field research in Costa Rica and Spain. He has published on ethics and the economy, including Fair Trade and a Global Commodity: Coffee in Costa Rica (Pluto Press, 2008) and he is co-editor of Hidden Hands in the Market: Ethnographies of Fair Trade, Ethical Consumption and Corporate Social Responsibility (Research in Economic Anthropology 2008).

Table of Contents

List of figures
Preface

Introduction
James G. Carrier

Section I: Producers and Consumers

Section Introduction

Chapter 1. Good chocolate? An examination of ethical consumption in cocoa
Amanda Berlan

Chapter 2. Consuming producers: fair trade and small farmers
Peter G. Luetchford

Chapter 3. ‘Trade, not aid’: imagining ethical economy
Lill Vramo

Chapter 4. ‘Today, one can farm organic without living organic’: Belgian farmers and recent changes in organic farming
Audrey Vankeerberghen

Section II: Ethical Consumption Contexts

Section Introduction

Chapter 5. Narratives of concern: beyond the ‘official’ discourse of ethical consumption in Hungary
Tamás Dombos

Chapter 6. Critical consumption in Palermo: imagined society, class and fractured locality
Giovanni Orlando

Chapter 7. On the challenges of signalling ethics without the stuff: tales of conspicuous green anti-consumption
Cindy Isenhour

Chapter 8. Ethical consumption as religious testimony: The Quaker case
Peter Collins

Chapter 9. Re-inventing food: the ethics of developing local food
Cristina Grasseni

Conclusion
James G. Carrier and Richard Wilk

About the contributors
Bibliography
Index

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews