2016
DOI: 10.1080/00167487.2016.12093979
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The circular economy – a reappraisal of the ‘stuff’ we love

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Cited by 16 publications
(11 citation statements)
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“…An estimated $4.5 trillion of potential value from a CE (Lacy and Rutqvist 2015) has been successful in stimulating engagement from different quarters. CE thinking synthetises concepts and ideas in several disciplines (Pollard et al 2016) as outlined also by other scholars (see for instance, Prendeville et al 2018). Circular product design and production are amongst the key enablers of the model (EMF 2015;Esposito et al 2018).…”
Section: Anticipated In 'The Economics Of the Coming Spaceshipmentioning
confidence: 93%
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“…An estimated $4.5 trillion of potential value from a CE (Lacy and Rutqvist 2015) has been successful in stimulating engagement from different quarters. CE thinking synthetises concepts and ideas in several disciplines (Pollard et al 2016) as outlined also by other scholars (see for instance, Prendeville et al 2018). Circular product design and production are amongst the key enablers of the model (EMF 2015;Esposito et al 2018).…”
Section: Anticipated In 'The Economics Of the Coming Spaceshipmentioning
confidence: 93%
“…The engagement of different stakeholders is taking place through a conversation evoking the attainment of a more positive relationship between economy and ecology, one that is focusing on reintegration (EMF et al 2015), regeneration and restoration (EMF and McKinsey 2012), on 'doing the right things' (eco-effectiveness) (Webster 2013a) and that leverages upon creativity to find specific and concrete solution (planning) to the current ecological concerns (Pollard et al 2016). Motivations for positive change to assist CE stakeholders have also been identified.…”
Section: Societal Addictions and A Circular Economy Inspired Visionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…To overcome potential "attitude-behaviour gaps" [94] Similarly, few researchers have attempted to profile ABC users. Through cluster analysis Lawson et al [76 Study 2] found individuals with the most positive attitudes and highest intention to engage in ABC-who they labelled "Change Seekers"-tended to be younger male, ethnically diverse, and more educated with higher incomes, whilst also less materialistic and less possessive, than other cluster groups 14 . Change Seekers also tended to be relatively high in economic consciousness, environmental consciousness and variety seeking yet comparatively low in status consumption, brand loyalty and consumer choice confusion.…”
Section: Future Research Directionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…One demand-side reason for the seemingly radical nature of CE is that it actively promotes access-based consumption (ABC) where all property rights [6], costs, responsibilities, and risks associated with legal ownership remain with the provider, with consumers becoming "users" who are granted temporary access to the product(s) via renting product-service systems (PSSs) and/or engaging in peer-to-peer (P2P) sharing [2] 1 . The hope is that by stimulating a better appreciation of utilitarian value, ABC will help switch peoples' focus away from superfluous purchases to more sustainable consumption activity [2,14]. Consequently, widespread adoption of a Circular Economic framework incorporating ABC will have important legal and psychosocial implications, not least because it will change the fundamental meaning, nature, and dynamics of ownership.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
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