Empire's Footprint: The Ecological Dimensions of a Consumers' Republic

Consumers and consumption cannot be separated from workers and livelihood for very long. [...] the material resources themselves are important: as I have shown, evaluating the environmental impacts of consumption depends on ecological specificity - the kind of whale, banana, or sport fish all matter...

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Veröffentlicht in:Magazine of history 2011-10, Vol.25 (4), p.15-20
1. Verfasser: Soluri, John
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description Consumers and consumption cannot be separated from workers and livelihood for very long. [...] the material resources themselves are important: as I have shown, evaluating the environmental impacts of consumption depends on ecological specificity - the kind of whale, banana, or sport fish all mattered a great deal. [...] there are those dreadfully boring tax codes, tariffs, trade agreements, and subsidies that have greatly influenced patterns of consumption. [...] consumption is probably best used to lead students into the less glamorous worlds of working environments to encourage students to think about the relationship between production and consumption.
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identifier ISSN: 0882-228X
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source Jstor Complete Legacy; Oxford University Press Journals All Titles (1996-Current); Education Source
subjects Automobiles
Bass
Consumer economics
Ecotourism
Energy consumption
Environmental impact
Fruits
Greenhouse gases
Historians
Marine ecology
Rubber
Social activism
Social Class
Sustainable agriculture
Tourism
United States history
Whales
Whales & whaling
Whaling ships
title Empire's Footprint: The Ecological Dimensions of a Consumers' Republic
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