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English
Routledge
08 May 2023
This book is a comprehensive guide on how to teach sustainable consumption in higher education. Teaching and Learning Sustainable Consumption: A Guidebook systematizes the themes, objectives, and theories that characterize sustainable consumption as an educational field.

The first part of the book discusses approaches to teaching and learning sustainable consumption in higher education, including reflections on how learning occurs, to more practical considerations like how to set objectives or assess learning outcomes. The second part of the book is a dive into inspiring examples of what this looks like in a range of contexts and towards different aims – involving 57 diverse contributions by teachers and practitioners. Building on the momentum of a steady increase in courses addressing sustainable consumption over the past decade, this guidebook supports innovative approaches to teaching and learning, while also bringing to the fore conceptual debates around higher education and sustainability.

Overall, this book will be a seminal resource for educators teaching about sustainability and consumption. It will help them to navigate the specifics of sustainable consumption as a field of scholarship, and design their teaching approaches in a more informed, competent, and creative way.

Edited by:   , , , ,
Imprint:   Routledge
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 234mm,  Width: 156mm, 
Weight:   840g
ISBN:   9780367893224
ISBN 10:   0367893223
Series:   Routledge-SCORAI Studies in Sustainable Consumption
Pages:   370
Publication Date:  
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Primary
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
PART I Design considerations for teaching and learning sustainable consumption 1 Sustainable consumption, a tricky topic to teach Marlyne Sahakian, Jordan King, Jen Dyer, Daniel Fischer, and Gill Seyfang 2 Learning theories and pedagogies in teaching sustainable consumption Daniel Fischer, Jordan King, Marlyne Sahakian, Jen Dyer, and Gill Seyfang 3 Learning objectives for teaching sustainable consumption Jordan King, Daniel Fischer, Marlyne Sahakian, Jen Dyer, and Gill Seyfang 4 Assessing learning in teaching sustainable consumption Jordan King, Daniel Fischer, Marlyne Sahakian, Jen Dyer, and Gill Seyfang PART II Examples of teaching and learning sustainable consumption Marlyne Sahakian, Jordan King, Jen Dyer, Daniel Fischer, and Gill Seyfang 5 The good life game: bargaining needs and resources Lisa Hollands and Shirin Betzler 6 A letter to Aadya: uncovering social injustices in fast fashion Samira Iran and Anja Lisa Hirscher 7 Clothing libraries: on-campus stores as real-world experiments for sustainable fashion Samira Iran, Anja Lisa Hirscher, and Daniel Fischer 8 How to draw the economy? Putting care and nature back into economic models Lucie Sovová 9 Powering practices: developing scenarios for energy futures Tom Hargreaves 10 Speculative fiction for energy futures Tom Hargreaves and Jos Smith 11 The story of your gadget Gill Seyfang 12 From trash to treasure! Turning junk into Christmas-time gifts I-Liang Wahn 13 Practice makes perfect! Exploring how practices cause consumption problems, and are also part of the solution Marlyne Sahakian and Mallory Xinyu Zhan 14 A playful take on non-financial disclosure processes: speed dating with organizations and frameworks Georgina Guillen-Hanson 15 Decarbonise! A playful pathfinding approach to a sustainable future Veronika Kiss and Klára Hajdu 16 Let’s report a future practice: interview roleplay as a way to flesh out alternatives Lenneke KuiJer 17 Company walk’n’talk: learning by sharing about corporate sustainability practices Lisa Hollands and Shirin Betzler 18 Asking the (sustainable consumption) professionals! Eva Heiskanen 19 The supermarket sweep: what do labels (not) tell us? Gill Seyfang 20 To build or not to build? Roleplay for conflict management Valerie Brachya 21 Theoretical theater: personifying theoretical ‘Characters’ to facilitate critical thinking Gill Seyfang and Marlyne Sahakian 22 The change point toolkit for teaching: designing creative interventions Alison L. Browne, Claire Hoolohan, Katherine Ellsworth-Krebs, and Liz Sharp 23 Consumption detectives: an imagination exercise Shirin Betzler, Jessica Jung, Lisa Hollands, and Regina Kempen 24 Speak up! Debating critical voices Shirin Betzler and Lisa Hollands 25 The clothesline for sustainability: can individual actions contribute to strong sustainable consumption? Sylvia Lorek 26 Go Bananas! What everyday foods tell us about sustainability Sally Russell 27 Creature of habit! Cornelia Mayr 28 The power of one? Engaging students to reflect on individual agency to confront environmental issues Emily Huddart Kennedy 29 Pizza policy misto: our perfect recipe for sustainable food consumption Sylvia Lorek 30 Contemplating consumption: a meditation and mindfulness exercise Manisha Anantharaman and Daniel Fischer 31 Walk’n’Write: ref lecting on efficiency, consistency, and sufficiency Shirin Betzler and Lisa Hollands 32 It’s all about the message: promoting sustainability through communication design Doreen Donovan 33 Second-hand clothing experienced first-hand: sustainable consumption through situated learning Heike Derwanz 34 Dressed for sustainability success: a capsule wardrobe project Iva Jestratijevic 35 Listen up! The role of podcasts for understanding environmental issues as a social construct Juliet Fall and Karine Duplan 36 Create a website: a hands-on approach to communicate sustainable consumption Karin Dobernig 37 Organizing for impact: strategic planning and community collaboration for social change towards sustainable consumption Manisha Anantharaman and Suzanne Schmidt 38 Who knows where the money goes? Using a spending diary to reflect on consumption habits Meredith Katz 39 Learning to change myself: personal approaches to sustainable consumption Pascal Frank 40 Extracting sustainability: exposing the impacts from mining to supply the electronics industry Robert Rattle 41 Capturing sustainable energy solutions on camera Tom Hargreaves 42 Packed with sustainability! Urška Vrabič-Brodnjak 43 Uncovering economies of sustainability: looking at alternatives to the status quo Helen Holmes 44 Learning from the past? A socio-historical approach to food practices Stefan Wahlen 45 Using zombies to communicate climate change! Petra Bättig-Frey and Urs Müller 46 The 21-day sustainability challenge Carmen Valor 47 Whodunnit? Role-playing to understand stakeholder perspectives through corporate scandals Georgina Guillen-Hanson 48 Brave new world? Getting in a digitalized and globalized state of mind Piergiorgio Degli Esposti 49 A change is gonna come: designing campus interventions to promote behavior change for sustainable consumption Jordan King, Daniel Fischer, and Katja Brundiers 50 I can’t get no satisfaction: deliberating needs and satisfiers in sustainable consumption Daniel Fischer, Jordan King, and Carlos R. Casanova 51 Business Origami! Piecing together product life cycles in the product-service system Kersty Hobson 52 Covering one’s tracks: an ecological footprint game and debate Karin Dobernig and Karl-Michael Brunner 53 Mobility, what opportunities for urban development and public policies? Marlyne Sahakian 54 From field research to design fiction: from clarifying the present, to designing the future Nicolas Nova 55 What we eat and why: narratives of food justice Sunayana Ganguly and Shreelata Rao Sheshadri 56 How hard can it be to change practices? Margit Keller and Triin Vihalemm 57 An intra-active exhibition on feminist theory Tullia Jack 58 What I am wondering …: a teacher training program on how to find and answer questions of sustainable consumption Antonietta Di Giulio 59 Feel and think! Teaching aspiring school teachers to teach slow fashion Heike Derwanz 60 Future voyaging: the power of imagining the future today Frederikke Oldin and Charlotte Louise Jensen 61 Don’t just learn the lesson, live the lesson: study abroad trips for collaborative and community-based sustainability Ashley Colby

Daniel Fischer is Associate Professor for Consumer Communication and Sustainability at Wageningen University in the Netherlands. His research studies communication and learning interventions to advance more sustainable lifestyles. In his teaching, he strives to increase reflexivity in students to empower them to re-shape their relationships with the consumer societies into which they have been born, encultured, and socialized in. Marlyne Sahakian is Associate Professor in Sociology at the University of Geneva. She teaches and does research on sustainable consumption in relation to food, energy, and wellbeing, and is a founding member of SCORAI Europe, a research network for sustainable consumption. She is the Director of a Master’s program called Sustainable Societies and Social Change, and strives to give students the critical and practical competencies for tackling sustainability problems. Jordan King is a doctoral candidate in the School of Sustainability and College of Global Futures at Arizona State University. His work focuses on advancing innovations in cultivating and assessing the sustainability competencies of learners. In his teaching, he aims to motivate students to link inner transformations with systemic change for sustainable futures. Jen Dyer is Associate Professor in Sustainability at the University of Leeds and a Senior Fellow of the Higher Education Academy. Jen enjoys using creative teaching methods to inspire and empower her students. Her research focuses on social inclusion and amplifying diverse voices around sustainability. Gill Seyfang is Associate Professor of Sustainable Consumption in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia, UK. She researches grassroots innovations for sustainable development and is a National Teaching Fellow (2017).

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