Eco-labelling. A Socio-economic Analysis.

Due to the interdisciplinary nature of eco-labelling, the sense of the phenomenon itself is lost when studied in isolation. With this consideration, a balance of research between practical and theoretical approaches, between environmental sociology, environmental economics, international trade relat...

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Main Author: Williams, Wendy
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: 2004
Subjects:
Online Access:http://epub.wu.ac.at/1888/1/document.pdf
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spelling ndltd-VIENNA-oai-epub.wu-wien.ac.at-epub-wu-01_79d2015-08-18T04:55:52Z Eco-labelling. A Socio-economic Analysis. Williams, Wendy ecolabel / tradeable permit / cost benefit analysis / consumer society / sustainability / Due to the interdisciplinary nature of eco-labelling, the sense of the phenomenon itself is lost when studied in isolation. With this consideration, a balance of research between practical and theoretical approaches, between environmental sociology, environmental economics, international trade relations, consumer society, sustainability and marketing theory was explored. Eco-labelling has far-reaching ramifications in society, not just in the commercial relationship between producer and consumer, but in socio-cultural norms and values. It combines economic and social forces via the marketplace. The research of this paper focuses on 1) the socio-cultural aspects of eco-labelling, 2) the economic incentive which drives eco-labelling and 3) the global institutional structures which influence the eco-labelling dimension. Chapter 1 provides an overview of eco-labelling and introduces ecological modernization, the theoretical foundation of this paper. Chapter 2 is a summary of interviews which were conducted with eco-labelling managers around the world. Chapter 3 analyses the economic impact of eco-labelling, the effects on international trade and the environment, and how eco-labelling affects consumers and producers. Chapter 4 deals with the social context of eco-labelling, and the social paradigms of consumer society and sustainability, merging in the case of ecological modernization. Chapter 5 looks at opportunities and challenges to eco-labelling, and concrete recommendations with respect to the design of eco-labelling programmes are made. Eco-labelling is the only tool which functions within the conflicting social forces of consumer society and sustainability. As a market-based instrument for environmental management that functions within the producer - consumer relationship, eco-labelling can be seen as the ecological marketisation of consumer society. Best practices in eco-labelling rely on accepting the fundamental market principles combined with social trends. (author´s abstract) 2004-11 Thesis NonPeerReviewed en application/pdf http://epub.wu.ac.at/1888/1/document.pdf http://epub.wu.ac.at/1888/
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic ecolabel / tradeable permit / cost benefit analysis / consumer society / sustainability /
spellingShingle ecolabel / tradeable permit / cost benefit analysis / consumer society / sustainability /
Williams, Wendy
Eco-labelling. A Socio-economic Analysis.
description Due to the interdisciplinary nature of eco-labelling, the sense of the phenomenon itself is lost when studied in isolation. With this consideration, a balance of research between practical and theoretical approaches, between environmental sociology, environmental economics, international trade relations, consumer society, sustainability and marketing theory was explored. Eco-labelling has far-reaching ramifications in society, not just in the commercial relationship between producer and consumer, but in socio-cultural norms and values. It combines economic and social forces via the marketplace. The research of this paper focuses on 1) the socio-cultural aspects of eco-labelling, 2) the economic incentive which drives eco-labelling and 3) the global institutional structures which influence the eco-labelling dimension. Chapter 1 provides an overview of eco-labelling and introduces ecological modernization, the theoretical foundation of this paper. Chapter 2 is a summary of interviews which were conducted with eco-labelling managers around the world. Chapter 3 analyses the economic impact of eco-labelling, the effects on international trade and the environment, and how eco-labelling affects consumers and producers. Chapter 4 deals with the social context of eco-labelling, and the social paradigms of consumer society and sustainability, merging in the case of ecological modernization. Chapter 5 looks at opportunities and challenges to eco-labelling, and concrete recommendations with respect to the design of eco-labelling programmes are made. Eco-labelling is the only tool which functions within the conflicting social forces of consumer society and sustainability. As a market-based instrument for environmental management that functions within the producer - consumer relationship, eco-labelling can be seen as the ecological marketisation of consumer society. Best practices in eco-labelling rely on accepting the fundamental market principles combined with social trends. (author´s abstract)
author Williams, Wendy
author_facet Williams, Wendy
author_sort Williams, Wendy
title Eco-labelling. A Socio-economic Analysis.
title_short Eco-labelling. A Socio-economic Analysis.
title_full Eco-labelling. A Socio-economic Analysis.
title_fullStr Eco-labelling. A Socio-economic Analysis.
title_full_unstemmed Eco-labelling. A Socio-economic Analysis.
title_sort eco-labelling. a socio-economic analysis.
publishDate 2004
url http://epub.wu.ac.at/1888/1/document.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT williamswendy ecolabellingasocioeconomicanalysis
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