Abstract

This article explores the transition towards a circular economy in the context of household food waste practices. The research concerning the circular economy has mainly focused on engineering or the processes of production, manufacturing, business and industry. However, the transition towards a circular economy requires, in addition to new technologies, infrastructures and innovations, a societal change and a change in everyday practices. In this article, we address this by examining the everyday practices of food waste reduction in households as ethical work. We claim that the intertwined practices, institutions and policies of the circular economy create moral categories and responsibilities in everyday food consumption. Thus, the transition towards circular economy requires everyday ethical work carried out by consumers. However, our analysis also brings out some possible challenges related to this transition that has not yet been accomplished. Our research materials consist of 26 food waste diaries collected from Finnish households and participant observation in 4 leftover cooking workshops organized with the Finnish Martha organization. We adapt Michel Foucault’s conception of ethics, focusing on the constitution of ethical subjectivity in food waste practices. Moreover, we utilize practice theoretical approach that has been widely used in food waste and sustainable consumption studies and connect it with Foucault’s theory. Our results suggest that in order to understand the circular economy as a moral economy, it is crucial to note the moral complexity of everyday life that results from partly contradictory ethical sensitivities and practices.

Highlights

  • Production of food waste is currently significantly affecting the sustainability of the food system, alongside the consumption of meat and dairy products

  • We address the practices of food waste reduction as everyday ethical work on the self that aims to transform food consumption practices towards sustainability

  • Based on Foucault’s ethical theory, our analysis has explored through four different dimensions how the work on ethical subjectivity enables the transformation of food consumption practices into more sustainable and circular ones

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Summary

Introduction

Production of food waste is currently significantly affecting the sustainability of the food system, alongside the consumption of meat and dairy products. Environmental, and social significance of food waste, reducing it is part of the European Union’s Circular Economy Strategy (Prieto-Sandoval et al, 2018). The aim of this strategy is to increase resource efficiency by maintaining the value of materials, through closing the loop of the product life cycle (EU Commission, 2014). The transition towards a circular economy (CE) requires changes in technological infrastructures, business models and consumption practices (Geissdoerfer et al, 2017). More research is needed for understanding the transition in the socio-material underpinnings of everyday life that the transition towards a CE requires (Mylan et al, 2016)

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