Refresh

0 Hits

Jantke | Lottermoser | Reinhardt | Rothe | Stöver

Nachhaltiger Konsum

Institutionen, Instrumente, Initiativen
Nomos,  2016, 472 Pages

ISBN 978-3-8487-3222-7

89,00 € incl. VAT
Also available as eBook
89,00 € incl. VAT
Available
Add to shopping cart
Add to notepad
 Further options for registered users

englischThis interdisciplinary volume analyses the potential of, the challenges posed by and the obstacles to sustainable consumption. It discusses institutional factors, policy instruments and civil society initiatives that aim to promote sustainable consumption. The contributions in the book assess policy innovations and regulatory instruments, observe current institutional changes in the field of sustainable consumption and critically reflect on the emergence of new actors and initiatives. The volume initiates a dialogue between the multiple disciplines involved in sustainable consumption research. It bridges economic, sociological, political, legal, philosophical, pedagogical and natural sciences perspectives on core problems and fundamental conflicts to encourage the development towards more sustainable patterns of consumption. This volume’s interdisciplinary nature provides insights beyond the boundaries of individual disciplines to enable cooperation on research into sustainable consumption.

With contributions by:

Marion Albers, Marina Alt, Wolfgang Bretschneider, Jacob Brower, Timo Busch, Ravindra Chitturi, Anette Cordts, Marina Creydt, Peter Dauvergne, Antonietta di Giulio, Markus Fischer, Doris Fuchs, Erik Gawel, Ulrich Gebhard, Daniela Gottschlich, Jonathan Happ, Franziska Haucke, Anne-Katrin Holfelder, Kerstin Jantke, Kim Lenhart, Andrea Lenschow, Florian Lottermoser, Michael G. Luchs, Florian Mäschig, Alexander Meier, Sina Nitzko, Grischa Perino, Jan Pollex, Jörn Reinhardt, Delf Rothe, Detlef Sack, E. K. Sarter, Sabine Schlacke, Thomas Schramme, Alexander Schrode, Sandra Schwindenhammer, Achim Spiller, Jana Stöver, Klaus Tonner

»Das Buch sollte in den Schul- und Hochschulbibliotheken nicht fehlen.«
Dr. Jos Schnurer, socialnet.de 1/2017