Fair Trade and the Citizen-Consumer: Shopping for Justice? 2012th Edition
Author(s): K. Wheeler (Author)
Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan
Publication Date: 23 Oct. 2012
Edition: 2012th
Language: English
Print length: 231 pages
ISBN-10: 0230301428
ISBN-13: 9780230301429
Book Description
As sales of fair-trade goods explode across the globe, Fair Trade and the Citizen-Consumer provides a timely analysis of the organizations, institutions and grassroots networks behind this growing movement. Drawing on examples from the UK, Sweden and USA, this book moves away from models of individualized consumer choice and instead explores the collective cultures and practices that motivate and sustain fair-trade consumer behaviour. Although the fair-trade citizen-consumer has been called to action and publicly represented as an individual ‘voting’ in the marketplace, this book reveals how market interventions are editing the choices available to consumers, at the same time as ‘Fairtrade Town’ consumer networks are flourishing. Offering new and critical insights into the fair-trade success story, this book also contributes to debates about sustainable consumption behaviour and the growth of ‘new’ forms of political participation and citizenship.
Editorial Reviews
Review
‘Katy Wheeler offers a thorough and judicious evaluation of the Fairtrade movement and, thereby, a significant contribution to understanding the political potential of ethical consumption.’ – Alan Warde, Professor Sociology, University of Manchester, UK
“A thouroughly engaging read … this book is an accessible and thought-provoking offering that works to engage critically with fair trade rather than merely celebrate it. [The book] offers a critical and timely intervention, drawing attention to the lived realities of fair-trade consumption, and provides a useful platform to inform and stimulate further debate and research.” – Cultural Sociology
About the Author
KATHRYN WHEELER is Senior Researcher at the Department of Sociology, University of Essex, UK. Her research focuses on ethical consumption and moral economies. She is currently working on an ERC-programme exploring ‘consumption work and societal divisions of labour’ in which she is undertaking comparative research on recycling in the UK and Sweden.