Wiley-Blackwell, 2011. — 247 p.
Series Editors’ Preface
Preface and Acknowledgements
Introduction: Politicizing Consumption in an Unequal World
The Moralization of Consumption
Justice, Responsibility and the Politics of Consumption
Relocating Agency in Ethical Consumption
Problematizing Consumption
Part One Theorizing Consumption Differently
The Ethical Problematization of ‘The Consumer’
Teleologies of Consumerism and Individualization
Theorizing Consumers as Political Subjects
The Responsibilization of the Consumer
What Type of Subject Is ‘The Consumer’?
Does Governing Consumption Involve
Governing the Consumer?
The Ethical Problematization of the Consumer
Practising Consumption
The Antinomies of Consumer Choice
Theorizing Consumption Practices
Problematizing Choice
Articulating Background
Problematizing Consumption
Consumer Choice and Citizenly Acts
Articulating Consumption and the Consumer
Mobilizing the Ethical Consumer
Articulating the Ethical Consumer
Part Two Doing Consumption Differently
Grammars of Responsibility
Justifying Practices
Researching the (Ir)responsible Consumer
Versions of Responsibility
Dilemmas of Responsibility
Local Networks of Global Feeling
Locating the Fair Trade Consumer
Re-evaluating Fair Trade Consumption
Managing Fair Trade, Mobilizing Networks
Doing Fair Trade: Buying, Giving, Campaigning
Fairtrade Urbanism
Rethinking the Spatialities of Fair Trade
Re-imagining Bristol: From Slave Trade to Fair Trade
Putting Fair Trade in Place
Fair Trade and ‘The Politics of Place Beyond Place’
Conclusion: Doing Politics in an Ethical Register
Beyond the Consumer
Doing Responsibility
Notes