Longer lasting products : alternatives to the throwaway society

Author(s)

    • Cooper, Tim

Bibliographic Information

Longer lasting products : alternatives to the throwaway society

edited by Tim Cooper

Gower , Ashgate, c2010

  • : hbk

Available at  / 3 libraries

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Note

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The present economic system requires us to consume and throw away more and more goods. Yet often it's our desire, and the best interests of the environment, for these goods to last. The contributors to this book, who comprise many of the most significant international thinkers in the field, explore how longer lasting products could offer enhanced value while reducing environmental impacts. If we created fewer but better quality products, looked after them carefully and invested more in repair, renovation and upgrading, would this direct our economy onto a more sustainable course? The solution sounds simple, yet it requires a seismic shift in how we think, whether as producers or consumers, and our voracious appetite for novelty. The complex range of issues associated with product life-spans demands a multidisciplinary approach. The book covers historical context, design, engineering, marketing, law, government policy, consumer behaviour and systems of provision. It addresses the whole range of consumer durables - vehicles, kitchen appliances, audio-visual equipment and other domestic products, furniture and floor coverings, hardware, garden tools, clothing, household textiles, recreational goods and DIY goods - as well as the re-use of packaging. Longer Lasting Products provides policy makers, those involved in product design, manufacturing and marketing, and all of us as consumers, with clear and compelling guidance as to how we can move away from a throwaway culture towards an economy sustained by more durable goods.

Table of Contents

  • Part I: Overview
  • 1: The Significance of Product Longevity
  • Part II: Design for Longevity
  • 2: Re-evaluating Obsolescence and Planning for It
  • 3: Subject/Object Relationships and Emotionally Durable Design
  • 4: Defying Obsolescence
  • 5: Understanding Replacement Behaviour and Exploring Design Solutions
  • 6: Adjusting Our Metabolism: Slowness and Nourishing Rituals of Delay in Anticipation of a Post-Consumer Age
  • 7: Durability, Function and Performance
  • Part III: Public Policy and Product Life-Spans
  • 8: Durability and the Law
  • 9: The Law on Guarantees and Repair Work
  • 10: Policies for Longevity
  • part IV: Marketing Longer Lasting Products
  • 11: Rethinking Marketing
  • 12: Marketing Durability
  • 13: Can Durability Provide a Strong Marketing Platform?
  • Part V: Product Use and Reuse
  • 14: Consumer Influences on Product Life-Spans
  • 15: Product Life Cycle Management Through IT
  • 16: There are Times and Places: Systems and Practices in the Domestic Processing and Reuse of Packaging
  • 17: Extending Product Life-Spans: Household Furniture and Appliance Reuse in the UK

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