The Circular Economy and Cascading: Towards a Framework

The principle of cascading, the sequential and consecutive use of resources, is a potential method to create added value in circular economy (CE) practices. Despite conceptual similarities, no research to date has explored how cascading has been operationalised and how to integrate it with CE R-impe...

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Main Authors: Kieran Campbell-Johnston, Walter J.V. Vermeulen, Denise Reike, Sabrina Brullot
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2020-09-01
Series:Resources, Conservation & Recycling: X
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2590289X20300098
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spelling doaj-6e566043bc7c4a239d23bf7196203c3f2020-11-25T03:14:59ZengElsevierResources, Conservation & Recycling: X2590-289X2020-09-017100038The Circular Economy and Cascading: Towards a FrameworkKieran Campbell-Johnston0Walter J.V. Vermeulen1Denise Reike2Sabrina Brullot3Copernicus Institute of Sustainable Development, Utrecht University; Corresponding author: Copernicus Institute of Sustainable Development, Utrecht UniversityCopernicus Institute of Sustainable Development, Utrecht UniversityCopernicus Institute of Sustainable Development, Utrecht UniversityUniversity of Technology of Troyes, FranceThe principle of cascading, the sequential and consecutive use of resources, is a potential method to create added value in circular economy (CE) practices. Despite conceptual similarities, no research to date has explored how cascading has been operationalised and how to integrate it with CE R-imperatives (Reduce, Reuse etc.) to facilitate implementation practices. CE practices emphasise value creation and retention, yet, there has been little reflexive examination of explicit and intrinsic value considerations; namely, how allocation choices, i.e. the decision-making process, for resource utilization are made. This paper aims to (1) examine how cascading has been operationalised (empirically and theoretically) to understand its normative underpinnings and value considerations; and (2) integrate cascading with the CE practices in a manner that accounts for the complexities of material allocation choices. Through a literature review of 64 articles from three bodies of literature (CE, cascading and up/downcycling), plus additional material on sustainable development, we show the cascading concept is a suitable framework to direct material uses and provides an overarching concept to integrate with CE R-imperatives. From this, we propose a new theoretical framework that considers the socio-organisational necessities for a CE-cascading system, specifically by deconstructing the allocation choices and exchanges of product material combinations between actor groups. This considers a dual perspective of the physical aspects of materials and the social context in which material allocation is made. The framework transcends individual value chain actor configurations to propose an overarching steering/governance framework, based on the triple-P of sustainability (People, Planet, Prosperity), to examine and direct CE-cascading exchanges, between and above individual users/firms.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2590289X20300098CascadingSteering frameworkCircular economyMaterial allocationMaterial hierarchiesGovernance
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kieran Campbell-Johnston
Walter J.V. Vermeulen
Denise Reike
Sabrina Brullot
spellingShingle Kieran Campbell-Johnston
Walter J.V. Vermeulen
Denise Reike
Sabrina Brullot
The Circular Economy and Cascading: Towards a Framework
Resources, Conservation & Recycling: X
Cascading
Steering framework
Circular economy
Material allocation
Material hierarchies
Governance
author_facet Kieran Campbell-Johnston
Walter J.V. Vermeulen
Denise Reike
Sabrina Brullot
author_sort Kieran Campbell-Johnston
title The Circular Economy and Cascading: Towards a Framework
title_short The Circular Economy and Cascading: Towards a Framework
title_full The Circular Economy and Cascading: Towards a Framework
title_fullStr The Circular Economy and Cascading: Towards a Framework
title_full_unstemmed The Circular Economy and Cascading: Towards a Framework
title_sort circular economy and cascading: towards a framework
publisher Elsevier
series Resources, Conservation & Recycling: X
issn 2590-289X
publishDate 2020-09-01
description The principle of cascading, the sequential and consecutive use of resources, is a potential method to create added value in circular economy (CE) practices. Despite conceptual similarities, no research to date has explored how cascading has been operationalised and how to integrate it with CE R-imperatives (Reduce, Reuse etc.) to facilitate implementation practices. CE practices emphasise value creation and retention, yet, there has been little reflexive examination of explicit and intrinsic value considerations; namely, how allocation choices, i.e. the decision-making process, for resource utilization are made. This paper aims to (1) examine how cascading has been operationalised (empirically and theoretically) to understand its normative underpinnings and value considerations; and (2) integrate cascading with the CE practices in a manner that accounts for the complexities of material allocation choices. Through a literature review of 64 articles from three bodies of literature (CE, cascading and up/downcycling), plus additional material on sustainable development, we show the cascading concept is a suitable framework to direct material uses and provides an overarching concept to integrate with CE R-imperatives. From this, we propose a new theoretical framework that considers the socio-organisational necessities for a CE-cascading system, specifically by deconstructing the allocation choices and exchanges of product material combinations between actor groups. This considers a dual perspective of the physical aspects of materials and the social context in which material allocation is made. The framework transcends individual value chain actor configurations to propose an overarching steering/governance framework, based on the triple-P of sustainability (People, Planet, Prosperity), to examine and direct CE-cascading exchanges, between and above individual users/firms.
topic Cascading
Steering framework
Circular economy
Material allocation
Material hierarchies
Governance
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2590289X20300098
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