This chapter concerns the impact of public involvement in public decision-making processes as related to household consumption patterns, and the impact on consumer behaviour of active participation.1 The call for participatory decision-making is common in the field of sustainable consumption (Murphy & Cohen, 2001). Implicit in many of these calls is the assumption that increasing the awareness and engagement of the public in decision-making processes for environmental protection will, ultimately, strengthen that protection. A second assumption is that public participation may also result in behavioural change by consumers. At a minimum there is the hope that an engagement of consumers will mean a greater awareness by consumers of the environmental impact of their purchases and behaviour (Barry, 2006). From a functional perspective there is the idea that the active participation of the consumer/citizen in public decision-making processes, as one of several 'stakeholders' or 'partners', could lead to alternative developments in sustainable consumption patterns. © 2009 Springer Netherlands.
CITATION STYLE
Coenen, F., Huitema, D., & Woltjer, J. (2009). Participatory decision-making for sustainable consumption. In Public Participation and Better Environmental Decisions: The Promise and Limits of Participatory Processes for the Quality of Environmentally Related Decision-making (pp. 89–110). Springer Netherlands. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4020-9325-8_6
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