Book contents
- Consumption, Status, and Sustainability
- New Directions In Sustainability And Society
- Consumption, Status, and Sustainability
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- Preface
- 1 Standing Out, Fitting In, and the Consumption of the World
- Part I Status Competition and Hierarchy in Human Societies
- Part II Variability in Status Consumption
- Part III Continuity and Discontinuity
- 6 The Never-Ending Feast Redux
- 7 The Status of Archaeological Knowledge in the Study of Status
- 8 Signs of Power and the Power of Signs
- 9 Status, Consumption, and Intersectionality in Sustainability Research
- Part IV Bending the Curve
- Index
- References
9 - Status, Consumption, and Intersectionality in Sustainability Research
from Part III - Continuity and Discontinuity
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 30 July 2021
- Consumption, Status, and Sustainability
- New Directions In Sustainability And Society
- Consumption, Status, and Sustainability
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- Preface
- 1 Standing Out, Fitting In, and the Consumption of the World
- Part I Status Competition and Hierarchy in Human Societies
- Part II Variability in Status Consumption
- Part III Continuity and Discontinuity
- 6 The Never-Ending Feast Redux
- 7 The Status of Archaeological Knowledge in the Study of Status
- 8 Signs of Power and the Power of Signs
- 9 Status, Consumption, and Intersectionality in Sustainability Research
- Part IV Bending the Curve
- Index
- References
Summary
Drawing on ethnographic material from Bangkok, I suggest that finding solutions for status-driven overconsumption is more complex than encouraging individuals to simply “consume less” and requires understanding how structural factors lead to heterogenous forms of consumption behavior. This leads to the question of what role inequality plays in overconsumption, and how these inequalities can be addressed in order to move closer toward our sustainability goals.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Consumption, Status, and SustainabilityEcological and Anthropological Perspectives, pp. 222 - 246Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2021