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The Practice Approach in Practice: : Lessons for Civil Society Organizations (CSOs) that work towards sustainable food consumption in Sweden

Parekh, Vishal and Klintman, Mikael LU orcid (2021) In Sustainable Production and Consumption 26. p.480-492
Abstract
Recognizing the great potential of civil society organizations (CSOs) as drivers of social
change, this study examines how CSOs’ work directed towards consumers—in this case, to make food consumption practices sustainable—could be analyzed and improved through insights in practice theory. This research scope adds to the sustainable consumption literature by shifting the lens from the rich body of scholarship examining the practices of households or organizations themselves to how CSOs can influence household practices. Interviews with five different Swedish CSOs serve as the study's main empirical basis. To analyze CSO activities that target households, we use practice theorist Alan Warde's well-established
categorization of four... (More)
Recognizing the great potential of civil society organizations (CSOs) as drivers of social
change, this study examines how CSOs’ work directed towards consumers—in this case, to make food consumption practices sustainable—could be analyzed and improved through insights in practice theory. This research scope adds to the sustainable consumption literature by shifting the lens from the rich body of scholarship examining the practices of households or organizations themselves to how CSOs can influence household practices. Interviews with five different Swedish CSOs serve as the study's main empirical basis. To analyze CSO activities that target households, we use practice theorist Alan Warde's well-established
categorization of four integrative social practices of eating: (1) the supplying of
food, (2) cooking, (3) the organization of meal occasions, and (4) aesthetic judgments of taste. Unlike some perspectives in sustainable consumption research that focus on consumer attitudes and behavioral change, a practice theory perspective encourages a view of consumption patterns as arising from complex and necessarily social configurations of human action formed in relation to evolving infrastructures and institutions in a cultural and historical context. In agreement with this, we suggest that the CSOs would generally benefit from focusing on particular practices, practice elements, and communities of practice. The different preconditions under which CSOs operate—such as material resource constraints and symbolic power resources—should further inform their chosen types of activities. However, we also conclude that the scale of the necessary societal changes ultimately requires increased integration and coordination of practical and political activities, not just among CSOs but throughout all spheres of society. Finally, we briefly outline avenues for further research. (Less)
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author
and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Social practice, Practice theory, Civil society organizations, Environment, Sustainability, Sustainable consumption, Food
in
Sustainable Production and Consumption
volume
26
pages
13 pages
publisher
Elsevier
external identifiers
  • scopus:85098462581
ISSN
2352-5509
DOI
10.1016/j.spc.2020.12.011
project
MISTRA Sustainable Consumption - from niche to mainstream (Phase II)
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
2bfa97d7-3fe9-4694-8bce-8faf6fbf37eb
date added to LUP
2020-04-03 17:12:03
date last changed
2023-09-10 00:59:53
@article{2bfa97d7-3fe9-4694-8bce-8faf6fbf37eb,
  abstract     = {{Recognizing the great potential of civil society organizations (CSOs) as drivers of social<br/>change, this study examines how CSOs’ work directed towards consumers—in this case, to make food consumption practices sustainable—could be analyzed and improved through insights in practice theory. This research scope adds to the sustainable consumption literature by shifting the lens from the rich body of scholarship examining the practices of households or organizations themselves to how CSOs can influence household practices. Interviews with five different Swedish CSOs serve as the study's main empirical basis. To analyze CSO activities that target households, we use practice theorist Alan Warde's well-established<br/>categorization of four integrative social practices of eating: (1) the supplying of<br/>food, (2) cooking, (3) the organization of meal occasions, and (4) aesthetic judgments of taste. Unlike some perspectives in sustainable consumption research that focus on consumer attitudes and behavioral change, a practice theory perspective encourages a view of consumption patterns as arising from complex and necessarily social configurations of human action formed in relation to evolving infrastructures and institutions in a cultural and historical context. In agreement with this, we suggest that the CSOs would generally benefit from focusing on particular practices, practice elements, and communities of practice. The different preconditions under which CSOs operate—such as material resource constraints and symbolic power resources—should further inform their chosen types of activities. However, we also conclude that the scale of the necessary societal changes ultimately requires increased integration and coordination of practical and political activities, not just among CSOs but throughout all spheres of society. Finally, we briefly outline avenues for further research.}},
  author       = {{Parekh, Vishal and Klintman, Mikael}},
  issn         = {{2352-5509}},
  keywords     = {{Social practice; Practice theory; Civil society organizations; Environment; Sustainability; Sustainable consumption; Food}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  pages        = {{480--492}},
  publisher    = {{Elsevier}},
  series       = {{Sustainable Production and Consumption}},
  title        = {{The Practice Approach in Practice: : Lessons for Civil Society Organizations (CSOs) that work towards sustainable food consumption in Sweden}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.spc.2020.12.011}},
  doi          = {{10.1016/j.spc.2020.12.011}},
  volume       = {{26}},
  year         = {{2021}},
}