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 |
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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. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1093/oahmag/oar042 |
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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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