Visualizing the shape of society: An analysis of public bads and burden allocation due to household consumption using an input-output approach

This study investigates how our lifestyles can cause societal issue including a reduction in social equity due to the consumption of natural resources. Based on a range of household environmental footprints and their application to a quantitative social equity evaluation framework, a methodology is...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Science of the total environment 2018-10, Vol.639, p.385-396
Hauptverfasser: Chapman, Andrew, Shigetomi, Yosuke
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container_title The Science of the total environment
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creator Chapman, Andrew
Shigetomi, Yosuke
description This study investigates how our lifestyles can cause societal issue including a reduction in social equity due to the consumption of natural resources. Based on a range of household environmental footprints and their application to a quantitative social equity evaluation framework, a methodology is proposed which identifies the creation and origin of public bads within society. This research builds on the methodologies of energy policy sustainability evaluation incorporated with environmentally extended input output analysis in order to critically assess lifestyle-based consumption impacts, and to quantify the allocation of subsequent burdens across generations. Further, the proposed methodology is applied to a case study in Japan, an aging, shrinking population. Analysis identifies the increasing burden originating with elderly generations, and due to the resolution offered by the methodology, specifically identifies commodities and services which underpin these future burdens, allowing for policy implications to be drawn. The public bads and consumption burden indicator established through the described methodology is proposed as a footprint harmonizing tool to assess sustainability and supplement the footprint family. [Display omitted] •Proposes an indicator to quantify lifestyle induced public bads and societal burden•Applied to a case study, demonstrating the elucidation of societal ‘shape’•GHG, PM2.5, water, industrial waste, and neodymium mining risk were considered.•Potential applications as a footprint harmonizing tool in the footprint family
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2018.05.151
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source MEDLINE; Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals
subjects Conservation of Natural Resources
Environmentally extended input-output analysis
Footprint
Household consumption
Housing - statistics & numerical data
Humans
Japan
Public bads
Social equity
Waste Products - analysis
Waste Products - statistics & numerical data
title Visualizing the shape of society: An analysis of public bads and burden allocation due to household consumption using an input-output approach
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