Beschreibung:
Tobias Gumbert deftly interrogates the dynamics of global food waste to uncover a potent obstacle to environmental sustainability and social justice: the intentional, insidious, and largely hidden narrowing of environmental responsibility within mainstream conversations about sustainability. Theoretically rich yet eminently practical, Gumbert's analysis is a wake-up call to policymakers, activists and academics alike.
Chapter 1: Responsibility and the Environment - What's at Stake?.- Chapter 2: Environmental Governance and the Organization of Irresponsibility.- Chapter 3: The Narrow Conception of Responsibility in Environmental Governance.- Chapter 4: Ethics, Justice, and Power: Widening the Meaning(s) of Responsibility.- Chapter 5: Responsibility and Interpretive Research.- Chapter 6: Food Waste Governance - Introduction to the Case Study.- Chapter 7: Tracing the Meanings of Responsibility in Food Waste Governance.- Chapter 8: Contextualizing Responsibilit(ies) in Food Waste Governance.- Chapter 9: Conclusion - Towards Institutions of Forward-Looking Collective Responsibility.