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Making ends meet, in the household and on the planet
Authors:Karl Dake  Michael Thompson
Affiliation:(1) Karl Dake was at the Survey Research Center, University of California at Berkeley, U.S.A. (until his untimely death);(2) London / Norwegian Research Centre in Organisation and Management, The Musgrave Institute, Rosenbergsgate 39, N-5015 Bergen, Norway
Abstract:Policy-making in relation to sustainable development is usually at the national (or, in relation to climate change, the global) level, yet the consumption it seeks to modify takes place at the household level. If households all ‘made ends meet’ in the same way then the much-relied upon notion of per capita consumption would be valid and we could rely on ‘top-down’ modelling to guide policy. Cultural Theory, however, predicts that there are five socially viable ways of making ends meet, and that all of them will be found (in varying proportions) within any nation. This prediction has been tested on a sample of 220 British households and shown to be well supported. Top-down modelling, it is argued, has to give way to a constructive interplay between the reflexive policy-maker and a plurally responsive citizenry. This revised version was published online in August 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.
Keywords:consumption styles  Cultural Theory  reflexivity
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