publication summary

Summary

Making a difference: ethical consumption and the everyday

By Matt Adams and Jayne Raisborough

Our everyday shopping practices are increasingly marketed as opportunities to‘make a difference’ via our ethical consumption choices. In response to a growing body of work detailing the ways in which specific alignments of ‘ethics’ and ‘consumption’ are mediated, we explore how ‘ethical’ opportunities such as the consumption of Fairtrade products are recognized, experienced and taken-up in the everyday. The ‘everyday’ is approached here via a specially commissioned Mass Observation directive, a volunteer panel of correspondents in the UK. Our on-going thematic analysis of their autobiographical accounts aims to explore a
complex unevenness in the ways ‘ordinary’ people experience and negotiate calls to enact their ethical agency through consumption. Situating ethical consumption, moral obligation and choice in the everyday is, we argue, important if we are to avoid both over-exaggerating the reflexive and self-conscious sensibilities involved in ethical consumption, and, adhering to a reductive understanding of ethical
self-expression.

Year
2010  
Title
Making a difference: ethical consumption and the everyday  
Journal
British Journal of Sociology  
Volume
61  
Issue
2  
Pages
256-274  
Language
English  
Type
Journal  
Academic Publication
yes  

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