2014
DOI: 10.1016/j.jclepro.2013.08.041
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Networked ecological citizenship, the new middle classes and the provisioning of sustainable waste management in Bangalore, India

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Cited by 51 publications
(44 citation statements)
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“…104 Furthermore, Anantharaman's work in India documents a 'zero-waste community,' brought into being by domestic servants and waste workers, while being claimed as a success by middle-class activists. 105 Appreciating that this community is active rather than latent is the key to understanding community as a form of public. Paterson outlines what we can say about 'public practices around climate change,' 106 starting with two arguments; first, the public is increasingly eroded by the private, and, second, governance responses to climate change require a 'reconstitution of the public sphere' (p. 149).…”
Section: Community and Representationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…104 Furthermore, Anantharaman's work in India documents a 'zero-waste community,' brought into being by domestic servants and waste workers, while being claimed as a success by middle-class activists. 105 Appreciating that this community is active rather than latent is the key to understanding community as a form of public. Paterson outlines what we can say about 'public practices around climate change,' 106 starting with two arguments; first, the public is increasingly eroded by the private, and, second, governance responses to climate change require a 'reconstitution of the public sphere' (p. 149).…”
Section: Community and Representationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Social network structures can also be an outcome of environmental activism (Tindall, Cormier, and Diani ). More specifically, researchers find that social networks help to facilitate green lifestyle projects and environmental movement participation by bringing together like‐minded people, sharing locally specific information and best practices, and offering social support (Anantharaman ; Horton ; Kennedy ; Nye and Hargreaves ; Stoddart and Tindall ). For example, Kennedy () finds that environmentally responsible actors share resources and social support within networks embedded in sympathetic neighborhoods.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Their educational background, additionally, assists them to subjectively differentiate themselves from old, traditional middle classes through their engagement with political debates as well as a broad, eclectic taste in cultural items. Thus, the concept refers to more than just an income group: it comprises social, political, environmental and economic dimensions and likewise operates as a cultural construct combining both tradition and modernity in its ideologies and consumption styles (Anantharaman, 2014;Jayne, 2006).…”
Section: The New Urban Middle Classes and Their Polysemic Rituals Of mentioning
confidence: 99%