Caring consumption and sustainability: Insights from household provisioning in the first ten years of motherhood

Kate Burningham and Sue Venn
Environmental Innovation and Societal Transitions, Vol 54 | March 2025

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Summary

As primary sites of everyday consumption households play a key role in sustainability transitions. Yet neither everyday consumption nor what goes on within households have received much attention within the sustainability transitions literature. This paper contributes to this research gap by exploring how everyday practices of mothering intersect with aspects of the sustainability of everyday food provisioning. This is explored via longitudinal research with 10 women over a period of 10 years beginning when they were pregnant with their first child. Analysis considers engagement in both overtly ethical or environmental product choices and the adoption of online shopping—a mode of consumption which may be ‘inadvertently’ environmental. Analysis highlights that provisioning practices are profoundly relational and flexible, prioritising care, thrift and time management. Sustainability transitions need to adopt holistic discourses of sustainable living which embrace the relational character of everyday consumption and support affordable and feasible everyday practices of care.

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Citation

Burningham K and S Venn 2025. Caring consumption and sustainability: Insights from household provisioning in the first ten years of motherhood, Environmental Innovation and Societal Transitions, Vol. 54. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.eist.2024.100932.

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