Household Recycling and Consumption Work: Social and Moral Economies

Household Recycling and Consumption Work: Social and Moral Economies

Household Recycling and Consumption Work: Social and Moral Economies

Household Recycling and Consumption Work: Social and Moral Economies

Paperback(1st ed. 2015)

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Overview

Consumers are not usually incorporated into the sociological concept of 'division of labour', but using the case of household recycling, this book shows why this foundational concept needs to be revised.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781349562886
Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan UK
Publication date: 02/23/2016
Series: Consumption and Public Life
Edition description: 1st ed. 2015
Pages: 235
Product dimensions: 5.51(w) x 8.50(h) x (d)

About the Author

Kathryn Wheeler is Lecturer in Sociology at the University of Essex, UK. Her research focuses on ethical consumption and moral economies. She is the author of Fair Trade and the Citizen-Consumer: Shopping for Justice? (2012), which analyses the organisations, institutions and grassroots networks that promote and support fair-trade in the UK, USA and Sweden.

Miriam Glucksmann is Emeritus Professor of Sociology at the University of Essex, UK and Visiting Professor of Sociology at the London School of Economics, UK. She has longstanding interests in work, employment and gender, especially restructuring, and connections between, different forms of labour. Her books include Structuralist Analysis in Contemporary Social Thought (1974, 2014), Women on the Line (1982, 2009), Women Assemble (1990), Cottons and Casuals (2000), and the jointly edited A New Sociology of Work? (2005). She completed a programme of research on 'Transformations of Work' as an ESRC Professorial Fellow in 2007, and was funded by the European Research Council (2010-2014) to research 'Consumption Work and Societal Divisions of Labour'.

Table of Contents

1. Picking a way through rubbish
2. Consumers as workers in economies of waste
3. Environmentally regimented rubbish: recycling systems in Sweden
4. Market and state heterogeneity: recycling systems in England
5. The three stages of recycling consumption work
6. Comparing recycling consumption work
7. Moral economies of recycling
8. Living off tips: waste and recycling in Brazil and India
9. Varieties of recycling work

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