Producing and consuming chemicals: The moral economy of the american lawn

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Abstract

The burgeoning application of fertilizers and pesticides to residential lawns, which has begun to offset the gains made in reducing the use of chemicals in agriculture, represents a serious environmental hazard in the United States and elsewhere. Increased use and purchase occur specifically among a sector of consumers who explicitly and disproportionately acknowledge the risks associated with chemical deposition, moreover, and who express concern about the quality of water and human health. What drives the production of monocultural lawns in a period when environmental consciousness has encouraged "green" household action (e.g., recycling)? And why does the production of chemical externalities occur among individuals who claim to be concerned about community family and environment? In this article, we explore the interactions that condition and characterize the growth of intensive residential yard management in the United States. We argue that the peculiat growth and expansion of the moral economy of the lawn is the product of a threefold process in which (1) the lawn-chemical industry has implemented new and innovative styles of marketing that (2) help to produce an association of community, family and environmental health with intensive turf-grass aesthetics and (3) reflect an increasing local demand by consumers for anthentic experiences of community, family, and connection to the nonhuman biological world through meaningful work. © 2008 Springer Science+Business Media, LLC.

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Robbins, P., & Sharp, J. T. (2008). Producing and consuming chemicals: The moral economy of the american lawn. In Urban Ecology: An International Perspective on the Interaction Between Humans and Nature (pp. 181–205). Springer US. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-0-387-73412-5_11

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