|
|
Showing 1 - 10 of
10 matches in All Departments
Explores the impact of consumerism from a design
perspectiveEssential reading for practitioners, researchers and
students in the design industryWill be of interest to
sustainability professionals, as well as conscious consumers
"Designing for Zero Waste is a timely, topical and necessary
publication. Materials and resources are being depleted at an
accelerating speed and rising consumption trends across the globe
have placed material efficiency, waste reduction and recycling at
the centre of many government policy agendas, giving them an
unprecedented urgency. While there has been a considerable
literature addressing consumption and waste reduction from
different disciplinary perspectives, the complex nature of the
problem requires an increasing degree of interdisciplinarity.
Resource recovery and the optimisation of material flow can only be
achieved alongside and through behaviour change to reduce the
creation of material waste and wasteful consumption. This book aims
to develop a more robust understanding of the links between
lifestyle, consumption, technologies and urban development. "--
There is now a widespread interest in reuse in many domains, from
opera houses built over old warehouses, to vintage clothes and
everyday goods incorporating repurposed materials or parts. Despite
its ubiquity, this extensive creative work is typically seen in
narrowly environmental terms, as a means of reducing carbon,
resource use or waste. However, as this volume shows, reuse also
has aesthetic and cultural dimensions and a rich social currency,
invoked to consciously subvert the accelerated consumer culture
responsible for our unfolding environmental crisis. In three parts,
the essays in this book consider reuse in terms of values,
aesthetics and meaning, its application in contemporary urban and
spatial settings, and the revival of social practices involving a
more conscious recourse to reuse and repair. These are bookended by
the editors' essays: the first, on the significant relationship
between reuse and technological and social acceleration evident in
the surrounding consumer society; and the last, on the multiple
forms of reuse deployed in a contemporary alternative building
practice, and their contributions to presenting alternative ways of
living in the world. Challenging dominant understandings of 'waste'
and 'consumption', Subverting Consumerism shows how reuse has
become a means for many to creatively engage with the past, and to
discover a continuity and sense of place eroded by the accelerative
regimes of contemporary consumerism. Becoming a means of
resistance, and offering a range of aesthetic, social and economic
possibilities, reuse can be found to subvert and challenge the
obsessive quest for the new found in contemporary consumerism.
The legacies of a century of fossil-fuel based development and
overconsumption, of treating the environment as a waste sink for
industry and agriculture, have left devastating impacts on the
earth's air, water and land, and these are directly implicated in
Climate Change. In response, a number of global institutions and
nations, including the European Union and China, have committed
themselves to the development of a 'circular economy'. This will
require a transformation of today's 'linear economy' of 'make, use
and dispose' as the market dictates, into a Circular Economy. The
aim of the Circular Economy is to decouple economic growth from
resource and energy use through iterative, systemic social,
economic and technological reform. This book presents new
theoretical and practical insights into this concept, based on case
studies from both the developing and developed world, with an
emphasis on economic and material transformation, design for reuse
and waste reduction, industrial 'symbiosis' (the planned
circulation of resources and energy within an industrial setting),
and social innovation and entrepreneurship. Four central themes
emerge through the essays presented here: the importance of
'restorative design' in transforming resource flows through both
production and consumption, the value of understanding and
enumerating wastes in more detail to enable their reuse, the
central role of advancing technology and applied science to further
this transformation of materials for reuse, and finally, a
reconfiguration of design, consumption and retail, so that the
present 'linear' economy of 'make, use and trash' can be replaced
with a more 'circular' model.
The Cambridge Platonist, Henry More (1614-1687), was a dominant
figure on the 17th-century intellectual scene. His life spanned
both the political revolutions of the English Civil War and its
aftermath and the intellectual revolution in 17th-century science
and philosophy. More was highly regarded in his own day as a
metaphysician, although the combination of receptivity to the new
(such as his admiration of Galileo, Descartes and Boyle) and
defence of traditional thinking (notably his belief in witchcraft)
makes him a difficult figure to assess today. The heterodoxy of his
theological views notwithstanding, More was an important spokesman
for moderation within the Anglican Church after the Restoration,
and a key figure in the Latitudinarian movement. This text is the
only biographical account of him by one of his contemporaries. The
almost hagiographical tone is ample testimony to the high regard in
which More was held by his admirers. Ward's "Life" is an important
document of intellectual and cultural history which testifies to
the continuing impact of More's ideas in the Enlightenment. Among
other topics, Ward's biography registers the impact of Quakerism in
the late-17th century and includes important details about More's
"heroine pupil", Anne Conway. The present edition prints both the
only modern edition of the printed part of Ward's account first
published in 1710, together with the manuscript Account of More's
writings.
Explores the impact of consumerism from a design
perspectiveEssential reading for practitioners, researchers and
students in the design industryWill be of interest to
sustainability professionals, as well as conscious consumers
Today's most pressing challenges require behaviour change at many
levels, from the city to the individual. This book focuses on the
collective influences that can be seen to shape change. Exploring
the underlying dimensions of behaviour change in terms of
consumption, media, social innovation and urban systems, the essays
in this book are from many disciplines, including architecture,
urban design, industrial design and engineering, sociology,
psychology, cultural studies, waste management and public policy.
Aimed especially at designers and architects, Motivating Change
explores the diversity of current approaches to change, and the
multiple ways in which behaviour can be understood as an enactment
of values and beliefs, standards and habitual practices in daily
life, and more broadly in the urban environment.
Today's most pressing challenges require behaviour change at many
levels, from the city to the individual. This book focuses on the
collective influences that can be seen to shape change. Exploring
the underlying dimensions of behaviour change in terms of
consumption, media, social innovation and urban systems, the essays
in this book are from many disciplines, including architecture,
urban design, industrial design and engineering, sociology,
psychology, cultural studies, waste management and public policy.
Aimed especially at designers and architects, Motivating Change
explores the diversity of current approaches to change, and the
multiple ways in which behaviour can be understood as an enactment
of values and beliefs, standards and habitual practices in daily
life, and more broadly in the urban environment.
"Designing for Zero Waste is a timely, topical and necessary
publication. Materials and resources are being depleted at an
accelerating speed and rising consumption trends across the globe
have placed material efficiency, waste reduction and recycling at
the centre of many government policy agendas, giving them an
unprecedented urgency. While there has been a considerable
literature addressing consumption and waste reduction from
different disciplinary perspectives, the complex nature of the
problem requires an increasing degree of interdisciplinarity.
Resource recovery and the optimisation of material flow can only be
achieved alongside and through behaviour change to reduce the
creation of material waste and wasteful consumption. This book aims
to develop a more robust understanding of the links between
lifestyle, consumption, technologies and urban development. "--
There is now a widespread interest in reuse in many domains, from
opera houses built over old warehouses, to vintage clothes and
everyday goods incorporating repurposed materials or parts. Despite
its ubiquity, this extensive creative work is typically seen in
narrowly environmental terms, as a means of reducing carbon,
resource use or waste. However, as this volume shows, reuse also
has aesthetic and cultural dimensions and a rich social currency,
invoked to consciously subvert the accelerated consumer culture
responsible for our unfolding environmental crisis. In three parts,
the essays in this book consider reuse in terms of values,
aesthetics and meaning, its application in contemporary urban and
spatial settings, and the revival of social practices involving a
more conscious recourse to reuse and repair. These are bookended by
the editors' essays: the first, on the significant relationship
between reuse and technological and social acceleration evident in
the surrounding consumer society; and the last, on the multiple
forms of reuse deployed in a contemporary alternative building
practice, and their contributions to presenting alternative ways of
living in the world. Challenging dominant understandings of 'waste'
and 'consumption', Subverting Consumerism shows how reuse has
become a means for many to creatively engage with the past, and to
discover a continuity and sense of place eroded by the accelerative
regimes of contemporary consumerism. Becoming a means of
resistance, and offering a range of aesthetic, social and economic
possibilities, reuse can be found to subvert and challenge the
obsessive quest for the new found in contemporary consumerism.
|
You may like...
Operation Joktan
Amir Tsarfati, Steve Yohn
Paperback
(1)
R250
R230
Discovery Miles 2 300
|