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Title: NEW CONSUMPTION COMMUNITIES AND THE ROLE FOR ETHICAL SPACES


1
NEW CONSUMPTION COMMUNITIES AND THE ROLE FOR
ETHICAL SPACES
  • Dr Caroline Bekin
  • Caroline.Bekin_at_brunel.ac.uk
  • Brunel Business School
  • Brunel University

2
New Consumption Communities? (Szmigin and
Carrigan 2003)
  • The development, over time, of alternative
    consumption communities which provide different
    forms of thinking and production-engaged
    consumption to an increasingly varied range of
    individuals
  • NCCs are sustained around a sense of community
    (Muniz and OGuinn 2001) developed through
    consumer engagement in boycotts, voicing of
    concerns and buycotts (Friedman 1996)

3
New Consumption Communities? (Szmigin and
Carrigan 2003)
  • NCCs reveal inadequacies of existing marketing
    systems
  • And may be seen to represent responses to
    corporate behaviour

4
Methodology
  • Ethnography involves an ongoing attempt to place
    specific encounters, events, and understandings
    into a fuller, more meaningful context. It is not
    simply the production of new information or
    research data, but rather the way in which such
    information or data are transformed into a
    written or visual form. As a result, it combines
    research design, fieldwork, and various methods
    of inquiry to produce historically, politically
    and personally situated accounts, descriptions,
    interpretations, and representations of human
    lives it is located between the interiority of
    autobiography and the exteriority of cultural
    analysis (Tedlock 2000, p.455)

5
Methodology
  • Ethnographic research
  • Participant-observation
  • Depth-Interviews
  • Narratives
  • Analysis of written documents, newsletters,
    leaflets, books, websites etc
  • 2004 2007
  • 7 communities / focus on 5

6
Discussion Themes
  • The communities did not reveal any surprising
    sustainable consumption practices
  • What was relevant was not so much what, but how
    they produced and consumed
  • Shared (SH/WC/SV) and self-generated electricity,
    water etc (HHP/SH)
  • Vegetable gardening and food processing
  • Bulk-buying and bulk-consuming
  • Reduced and responsible personal consumption
  • Repair, re-usage, recycling and composting

7
Futurefarms
  • Its not just what we produce we provide a
    marketplace People grow their own stuff anyway.
    So in the summer people bring their own
    courgettes or runner beans, things that were not
    selling or additional to what were selling. Nick
    has asparagus, and we provide a marketplace for
    things like that, that perhaps would have just
    got thrown away And were also, as you saw,
    marketing cheese and lamb in season So there is
    a greater consumption of locally produced things
    outside of what we produce ourselves.
    FFI/Pr96/Paul

8
Sunny-Valley Community
  • Everything we do is developed with an awareness
    of the impact of our work and lives on the
    environment. We recycle as much waste as we can
    and strive to reduce our consumption of energy.
    We grow our own vegetables and fruit
    organically. SVCW/Pr6

9
Hockerton Housing Project
  • We purchase quite a lot of stuff from Suma, who
    are wholesalers, cooperative They supply a lot
    of organic, fairly traded products. Items from
    toilet rolls through to walnuts and dates. So we
    bulk-buy those for ourselves and we took a
    delivery on Sunday and it was split between three
    houses from here, two houses from the neighbours,
    one person whos friends with the project, so
    its about six people involved Our community
    seems to be growing at the moment!
    HHPI/Pr92/Nick

10
Stone-Hall Community
  • We thought it would be a great idea if we used a
    page to ask if any of you could donate certain
    items. Most of them are old items that you might
    be throwing away. As you know, Stone-Hall is
    non-profit making and we value your support in
    whatever way possible. Please look at the list
    below and see if you could contribute... Garden
    stuff. Unwanted wheel barrows given a good home.
    In fact any unwanted garden equipment you have in
    your shed. Insulation material. We will gladly
    take away your old and worn-out duvets or
    sleeping bags, to be used as roof insulation for
    our straw bale house SHCW/Pr150

11
Discussion Themes
  • Place was fundamental (Kozinets 2002)
  • It strengthened the communities values and group
    norms
  • The communities acted as alternative consumption
    spaces (Williams and Paddock 2003 Williams,
    Windebank and Paddock 2005)
  • Living arrangements, organisational structures
    and processes facilitated, and were facilitated
    by positive, production-engaged consumption
    practices

12
Stone-Hall Community
  • We can all work together, and obviously I
    wouldnt have massive patches of land andI
    wouldnt be able to cope with all the digging and
    that kind of thing. So in a way, community makes
    it really easy to be able to do it
    SHCI/Pr92/Cynthia

13
Futurefarms
  • Pretty much all members of the group have been
    here at one point in the morning and we sort of
    have a chat and go through things and there are
    certain tasks that we do together as a group. ()
    Also other members of the community who are not
    on the committee were there helping us as well
    FFI/Pr160/Mark
  • I have been here about ten years and probably
    for the first eight years I knew very few people,
    but now through being involved with this I know
    almost everybody in the village. So, yeah, its
    had great benefits, and of course when we have
    our market, well, you saw it at the Club, people
    come and it is a place for people to meet
    FFI/Pr83/Janette

14
Discussion Themes
  • Not conflict free, particularly where the realms
    of individual and community consumption clashed
  • Issues of fairness with regards to the
    communities ethical consumption policies were to
    the fore (cf. Mayo and Fielder 2006)

15
Woodland Community
  • Woodland doesnt like the dirt and the sight of
    so many vehicles, so from now on if you have more
    than one car and only one in use, there will be a
    parking fee charged per day, and if the vehicles
    remain on site they must be kept clean But look
    at that, do you see it? Thats Jonathans old
    boat, and it has been there for nearly 20 years
    and he never does anything with it!
    WCF/Pr19/Laura

16
Discussion Themes
  • NCCs address the social contexts and some of the
    structural factors which sustain
    environmentally-unfriendly habits they
  • Develop their own environments
  • Develop their own information/knowledge
  • Develop normative incentives, punishments (!) and
    structures
  • Discuss mundane consumption issues

17
Sunny-Valley Community
  • Co-op members have been debating on whether or
    not to procure some piglets. According to
    Raymond, some community members are vegetarians
    and unsupportive of meat consumption. However,
    one of the values of this community is to respect
    diversity, so they have decided to allow meat
    consumption as long as they raise their own
    meat and take the animals to the slaughter
    house. SVFN

18
Woodland Community
  • At Woodland members had their weekly must-do
    jobs divided into rotas and posted on a
    blackboard. Additionally, members could either
    join or create projects, e.g., grow the
    potatoes or the carrots during a particular year.
    Although gardening was not compulsory it was
    successfully embraced, and there was much
    normative pressure on members who were more laid
    back and unwilling to join others or to come up
    with their own contribution. Cliffs perception
    of this pressure made him feel as if he were not
    contributing enough, which in turn generated much
    guilt. WCFN

19
Futurefarms
  • Futurefarms has educated me in knowing a bit
    more about how most food in Britain is produced,
    so I have learnt an awful lot through it about
    agriculture, horticultural techniques and the way
    the farming community works FFI/Pr70/Mark

20
Discussion Themes
  • NCCs as ethical spaces (Low and Davenport 2007)
  • Ethical by default
  • Choice-editing (Mayo and Fielder 2006)
  • Safe-shells from consumer temptations and an
    aid in self-discipline
  • Moral foundations and supportive social contexts
    (Jacobs 2002) for the enactment of ethical,
    production-engaged consumption

21
Stone-Hall Community
  • Theres less opportunity to buy things, so Im
    not walking around the supermarket going, oh
    Ill just have that! Im not ever inspired to
    just, Im not ever Yeah, Im not ever tempted!
    Im satisfied with the food here its really
    great for me. And I suppose TV as well we dont
    have a TV soWell, we have a TV, but we watch
    videos and things so theres none of that
    constant, you go out and buy cheese strings or
    whatever they are Theres none of that, so its
    really easy to not consume SHCI/Pr140-144/Cynth
    ia

22
Stone-Hall Community
  • The ethical choices are being made for me,
    really, because Ive joined this organisation
    where, or am part of this thing wherethings are
    sourced ethically in that way, so Im not having
    to make the choices. I definitely think I am
    becoming a more ethical consumer and
    particularly linking courses that are sort of
    connected with the environment and deep ecology
    and stuff like that has really had an effect. So,
    I think Im being sort of strongly influenced by
    those kinds of conversations and that kind of
    information. SHCI/Pr174/Norman

23
Stone-Hall Volunteer
  • My initial intent for volunteering at
    Stone-Hall was to have a place to stay and see
    a little bit of England. I was not expecting to
    have the eye opening experience that I had. I
    think that much of this came from being around
    people that truly respected the environment and
    with the peace of mind that for at least that
    week I was doing my best to not further harm our
    environment. SHCN/Pr11/Sibyl

24
Conclusions
  • NCCs highlight the importance of groups and
    community in consumption issues (Jackson 2005
    Cova 1997 Cova and Cova 2002)
  • NCCs emphasise the relevance of creating
    alternative spaces of choice
  • As aims and consequences of consumers own
    systems of meaning (Giesler and Pohlmann 2003)
  • Alternative meanings of the good life and good
    citizenship (c.f. Soper 2007 Soper and Thomas
    2006)

25
Conclusions
  • We do not need to live in intentional communities
    to try and be green, but (Jackson 2005
    Verplanken and Wood 2006)
  • Change basic environmental cues
  • Create the appropriate incentives, structures and
    technological innovations
  • Recognise the need for a multilayered approach
    to sustainable consumption
  • Bring everyday consumption into discursive
    consciousness (Giddens 1984)
  • Allow for alternative meanings to develop
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