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Feminist LCAs: Finding leverage points for wellbeing within planetary boundaries

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Feminist LCAs: Finding leverage points for wellbeing within planetary boundaries. / Ellsworth-Krebs, K.; Niero, M.; Jack, T.
In: Sustainable Production and Consumption, Vol. 39, 31.07.2023, p. 546-555.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Ellsworth-Krebs, K, Niero, M & Jack, T 2023, 'Feminist LCAs: Finding leverage points for wellbeing within planetary boundaries', Sustainable Production and Consumption, vol. 39, pp. 546-555. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.spc.2023.05.035

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Vancouver

Ellsworth-Krebs K, Niero M, Jack T. Feminist LCAs: Finding leverage points for wellbeing within planetary boundaries. Sustainable Production and Consumption. 2023 Jul 31;39:546-555. Epub 2023 Jun 21. doi: 10.1016/j.spc.2023.05.035

Author

Ellsworth-Krebs, K. ; Niero, M. ; Jack, T. / Feminist LCAs : Finding leverage points for wellbeing within planetary boundaries. In: Sustainable Production and Consumption. 2023 ; Vol. 39. pp. 546-555.

Bibtex

@article{14054128e44a4ee4834cabbfebcb8555,
title = "Feminist LCAs: Finding leverage points for wellbeing within planetary boundaries",
abstract = "Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) studies are valuable tools for identifying high impact processes and redesigning supply chains. However, LCAs have limits, in the sense that they offer insight into relative sustainability and don't question whether a product, or its use, is sustainable in absolute terms. In this intentionally provocative paper, you join Emma, a fictional average American 15-year-old, as she consults an LCA researcher, a sustainable consumption expert and a sociologist to investigate the best way to reduce the environmental impact of her hair removal. This paper presents a streamlined LCA for shaving, waxing and laser and connects this to a socio-material analysis of the history of hair removal in the USA to offer intervention into leverage points beyond Emma's choice of product. Our argument is not that avoiding shaving or waxing or laser is {\textquoteleft}the best{\textquoteright} action an individual could take to lower their environmental impact, instead we highlight how even the smallest activities coalesce into billion-dollar industries globally, with attendant billion tonne emissions. Thus, we utilise some of Danielle Meadows' twelve strategic leverage points to change systems in order to identify other interventions, such as (6) shifting information flows to make LCAs more impactful and accessible; (4) self-organising to normalise hairiness; or (3) changing the goals of the system. For example, valuing wellbeing over profit would arguably lead to regulation preventing medical professionals from marketing painful non-medical procedures. This paper reflects on how individuals make sense of their environmental impact within systems and argues for an increased emphasis on global wellbeing and absolute sustainability.",
keywords = "Life Cycle Assessment, Absolute environmental sustainability assessments, Strategic leverage points, Systems thinking, Socio-material histories, Sufficiency policies",
author = "K. Ellsworth-Krebs and M. Niero and T. Jack",
year = "2023",
month = jul,
day = "31",
doi = "10.1016/j.spc.2023.05.035",
language = "English",
volume = "39",
pages = "546--555",
journal = "Sustainable Production and Consumption",
issn = "2352-5509",
publisher = "Elsevier",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Feminist LCAs

T2 - Finding leverage points for wellbeing within planetary boundaries

AU - Ellsworth-Krebs, K.

AU - Niero, M.

AU - Jack, T.

PY - 2023/7/31

Y1 - 2023/7/31

N2 - Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) studies are valuable tools for identifying high impact processes and redesigning supply chains. However, LCAs have limits, in the sense that they offer insight into relative sustainability and don't question whether a product, or its use, is sustainable in absolute terms. In this intentionally provocative paper, you join Emma, a fictional average American 15-year-old, as she consults an LCA researcher, a sustainable consumption expert and a sociologist to investigate the best way to reduce the environmental impact of her hair removal. This paper presents a streamlined LCA for shaving, waxing and laser and connects this to a socio-material analysis of the history of hair removal in the USA to offer intervention into leverage points beyond Emma's choice of product. Our argument is not that avoiding shaving or waxing or laser is ‘the best’ action an individual could take to lower their environmental impact, instead we highlight how even the smallest activities coalesce into billion-dollar industries globally, with attendant billion tonne emissions. Thus, we utilise some of Danielle Meadows' twelve strategic leverage points to change systems in order to identify other interventions, such as (6) shifting information flows to make LCAs more impactful and accessible; (4) self-organising to normalise hairiness; or (3) changing the goals of the system. For example, valuing wellbeing over profit would arguably lead to regulation preventing medical professionals from marketing painful non-medical procedures. This paper reflects on how individuals make sense of their environmental impact within systems and argues for an increased emphasis on global wellbeing and absolute sustainability.

AB - Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) studies are valuable tools for identifying high impact processes and redesigning supply chains. However, LCAs have limits, in the sense that they offer insight into relative sustainability and don't question whether a product, or its use, is sustainable in absolute terms. In this intentionally provocative paper, you join Emma, a fictional average American 15-year-old, as she consults an LCA researcher, a sustainable consumption expert and a sociologist to investigate the best way to reduce the environmental impact of her hair removal. This paper presents a streamlined LCA for shaving, waxing and laser and connects this to a socio-material analysis of the history of hair removal in the USA to offer intervention into leverage points beyond Emma's choice of product. Our argument is not that avoiding shaving or waxing or laser is ‘the best’ action an individual could take to lower their environmental impact, instead we highlight how even the smallest activities coalesce into billion-dollar industries globally, with attendant billion tonne emissions. Thus, we utilise some of Danielle Meadows' twelve strategic leverage points to change systems in order to identify other interventions, such as (6) shifting information flows to make LCAs more impactful and accessible; (4) self-organising to normalise hairiness; or (3) changing the goals of the system. For example, valuing wellbeing over profit would arguably lead to regulation preventing medical professionals from marketing painful non-medical procedures. This paper reflects on how individuals make sense of their environmental impact within systems and argues for an increased emphasis on global wellbeing and absolute sustainability.

KW - Life Cycle Assessment

KW - Absolute environmental sustainability assessments

KW - Strategic leverage points

KW - Systems thinking

KW - Socio-material histories

KW - Sufficiency policies

U2 - 10.1016/j.spc.2023.05.035

DO - 10.1016/j.spc.2023.05.035

M3 - Journal article

VL - 39

SP - 546

EP - 555

JO - Sustainable Production and Consumption

JF - Sustainable Production and Consumption

SN - 2352-5509

ER -