Abstract

The Circular Economy (CE) is gaining increasing attention among businesses, policymakers and academia, and across research disciplines. While the concept’s strong diffusion may be considered its main strength, it has also contributed to the emergence of many different understandings and definitions, which may hinder or slow down its success. Specifically, despite growing attention, the role of the consumption side in the CE remains a largely under-researched topic. In the present review, we first search the literature by means of snowball mapping and a systematic key-word strategy, and then critically analyze the identified sources in order to elucidate the fundamental elements that should characterize consumption in a CE. We extract two pillars, directly from definition, that should be at the nucleus of future research on consumption in the CE: (1) the hierarchical nature of circular strategies, with “reduce” being preferred to all other strategies; and (2) the inadequacy of defining the CE only through its loops or strategies without considering its goal of attaining sustainable development. Moreover, the discussion is placed within the extant consumer research streams deemed relevant, in order to bridge these with the context of the CE. We highlight limitations of said research streams regarding their typical focus on the quality (and not the quantity) of consumption, the lack of heterogeneity in the theories and data collection methods employed, and the non-impact-based instruments typically used to measure consumption behaviors. We show how these limitations have contributed to the emergence of the intention–behavior gap, a phenomenon extant studies identify as key to overcome for encouraging sustainable consumption practices. In particular, we focus the analysis on the intention–behavior gap in order to: (1) establish the state-of-the-art; and (2) uncover avenues for future research addressing extant limitations.

Highlights

  • Current consumption levels in affluent nations are unsustainable and account for an important share of the overall negative environmental impacts caused by human activity.consumption patterns cannot change enough to overcome this problem in an economic context which incentivizes the constant creation and fulfilment of needs [1,2].calls for a socio-economic development paradigm shift, towards a sustainable one, are becoming increasingly urgent as human activity continues to push on the Earth system’s (ES) boundaries [3,4]

  • The present critical review identified several key points that can be used as the ground on which to build a much-needed bridge between existing research exploring sustainable consumption behavior (SCB) and related concepts, and research on consumption in the Circular Economy (CE)

  • The review contributes to the sustainability and CE literature by addressing the issue of the critical characterization of consumption in the CE and its relation to existing conceptions of and research on SCB

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Current consumption levels in affluent nations are unsustainable and account for an important share of the overall negative environmental impacts caused by human activity. The CE’s material flows require that biological nutrients are safely fed back to the biosphere while technical nutrients should be re-circulated, maintaining their quality, without entering the biosphere (i.e., industrial ecology) [6] It aims to integrate human–economic activity and the natural environment in a sustainable manner [7] and is currently being widely promoted by several nations, international bodies (e.g., China, Japan, UK, France, Netherlands, Spain) and businesses around the world (e.g., Danone and Patagonia) [8]. Based on the definition developed by [5], the present review identifies sustainable consumption to be one of the micro-level foundations of the CE This point is utilized to construct a conceptualization of consumption in the CE, in relation to existing streams of research, a critical step in exploring the factors and mechanisms behind the pertinent consumption behaviors. Need for innovation regarding the conceptual models employed and empirical testing of extant conceptualizations

Materials and Methods
Consumption in the Circular Economy
The Reduce Strategy in Consumption: A Necessary Step towards Sustainability
The Intention–Behavior Gap in Sustainable Consumption
Findings
Discussion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call