Journal article

Zones of friction, zones of traction: The connected household in climate change and sustainability policy

L Head, C Farbotko, C Gibson, N Gill, G Waitt

Australasian Journal of Environmental Management | Published : 2013

Abstract

Households are increasingly addressed as a focus of environmental policy, with varying degrees of success in achieving more sustainable outcomes at the domestic level. Part of the problem is black boxing, in which the inherent complexity of households tends to be taken for granted. Here we draw on cultural environmental research to put forward a more sophisticated conceptualisation - the connected household approach. The connected household framework uses the themes of governance, materiality and practice to illustrate and explain the ways everyday life, and the internal politics of households, are connected to wider systems of provision and socioeconomic networks. We introduce zones of fric..

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University of Melbourne Researchers