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J Consum Policy DOI 10.

1007/s10603-011-9184-3 ORIGINAL PAPER

Discursive Confusion over Sustainable Consumption: A Discursive Perspective on the Perplexity of Marketplace Knowledge
Annu Markkula & Johanna Moisander

Received: 31 March 2011 / Accepted: 8 November 2011 # Springer Science+Business Media, LLC. 2011

Abstract This paper works towards a discursive, practice-based perspective on explaining the knowledge-to-action gap observed in the consumer policy literature on sustainable consumption. Based on an empirical study that focuses on fashion and clothing markets, the objective is to elaborate on the nature and implications of the discursive polyphony that consumers face when striving for more sustainable consumption practices. Overall, it is concluded that part of the gap can be attributed to the discursive confusion that arises from a simultaneous existence of multiple, continuously changing and partly clashing discourses of sustainable consumption as well as the associated discursive struggle that consumers need to deal with when trying to make sense of their roles and responsibilities in sustainable development. Keywords Sustainable development . Sustainable consumption . Ethical consumption . Environmental knowledge . Discursive struggle Ever since the United Nations Conference on Environment and Development (UNCED 1992; Valor 2008) nearly 20 years ago, sustainable consumption has been at the top of the agenda in international development. Both at the level of local and global governance (European Commission 2005, 2007; European Communities 2007; Finnish Ministry of Trade and Industry 2008), consumers have been given an important role and responsibility in the pursuit of sustainable development (Autio et al. 2009; Berg 2011; Haunstrup Christensen et al. 2007; Moisander et al. 2010; Peattie and Collins 2009; Schaefer and Crane 2005; Thgersen and Crompton 2009). In spite of the initial optimism and enthusiasm about the transformative potential of sustainable consumption (Fuchs and Lorek 2005), the actual progress made in changing peoples consumption patterns has been modest (Thgersen and Crompton 2009), essentially boiling down to rather marginal

A. Markkula : J. Moisander (*) School of Economics, Department of Communication, Aalto University, P.O. Box 21210 AALTO, 00076 Helsinki, Finland e-mail: johanna.moisander@aalto.fi

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changes in peoples lifestyles (Berg 2011; Fuchs and Lorek 2005; Haunstrup Christensen et al. 2007; Thgersen 2005). In much of the consumer policy studies literature that focuses on this challenge, it is emphasized that the availability of appropriate knowledge and information about sustainable consumption is crucially important for empowering consumers to change their practices (Rezabakhsh et al. 2006; Thgersen 2005; Valor 2008). Regretfully, however, in spite of the wide availability of sustainable development-related information and educational material, rendered easily accessible by the new media technology for example (Rezabakhsh et al. 2006; Thgersen 2005), a disquieting knowledge-to-action gap still seems to persist as regards attempts to translate the available information into practice (Heiskanen 2005; Pape et al. 2011; Valor 2008). Searching for solutions to this problem, a number of scholars have called critical attention to the multitudinous external structural and practical barriers and impediments that consumers regularly face in their immediate consumption environments (Berg 2011; Moisander 2007; Muster 2011; Pape et al. 2011; Rezabakhsh et al. 2006; Thgersen 2005; Valor 2008). It has been argued, for example, that for consumers sustainable consumption practices appear to be generally more time-consuming, costly, and stressful (Valor 2008). Also, the mere abundance of sustainability-related information has been viewed as a demanding challenge to consumers, as it is often considerably difficult for individuals to make sense of the voluminous and sometimes contradictory information, and to learn what they actually can do, in practice, to take personal responsibility for sustainable development (Moisander 2007). As a result, the need to better educate and empower consumers in taking active and meaningful roles in sustainable development still remains a major challenge for environmental protection-related political decision making. In this paper, we set out to respond to these consumer and environmental policy-related challenges by conceptually elaborating and empirically illustrating the nature and implications of the discursive polyphony and the perplexity of information and knowledge that consumers face when striving for ecologically sustainable lifestyles and consumption practices. It is the thesis of the paper that part of the knowledge-to-action gap discussed in the literature can be attributed to the discursive confusion that arises from a simultaneous existence of multiple, continuously changing and partly clashing discourses of sustainable consumption (Caruana and Crane 2008; Hardy and Phillips 1999; Hardy et al. 2000; Laine and Vaara 2007; Livesey 2001; Maguire and Hardy 2006) that consumers face and need to deal with when making sense of their roles and responsibilities in sustainable development. Our point of departure, in building the argument, is the observation that in the practice of consumers everyday lives, the notions of sustainable development and sustainable consumption take multiple different and often contested meanings (Berg 2011; Fuchs and Lorek 2005; Livesey et al. 2009; Hobson 2002; Schaefer and Crane 2005; Seyfang 2005). Taking a culturalist (Reckwitz 2002), discursive approach to social inquiry, we start with the idea that the meaning of sustainable consumption is socioculturally constructed, premised upon, and supported by particular discourses of sustainable development, which have both material and linguistic, interconnected dimensions (Potter et al. 2007; Hall [1997] 2009) and have different effects. And because of the existence of multiple different discourses on a particular topic, there are always discursive struggles, which shape and structure the social space within which actors act, through the constitution of concepts, objects, and subject positions (Hardy and Phillips 1999). This struggle over meanings, we argue, may result in discursive confusion among consumers, leaving them bewildered and unclear in their minds about how they should act as responsible, ecologically conscious citizens.

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To empirically illustrate our argument, we report findings from a study that focuses on discursive struggle over the meanings of sustainable consumption in the empirical context of fashion and clothing markets. The empirical data of the study consists of qualitative consumer interviews conducted in Finland, which is one of the leading sustainable consumption and production (SCP) programme countries (Berg 2011). Overall, the paper contributes to the literature on consumer policy studies (Heiskanen 2005; Pape et al. 2011; Thgersen 2005; Valor 2008) by theoretically elaborating on a discursive perspective on the complexity and perplexity of sustainable development-related information and the resulting knowledge-to-action gap observed in the consumers behaviour. From this perspective, the gap is explained as something that arises from the discursive polyphony and struggle over the proper meanings of sustainable development that consumers encounter in the market. By shifting the analytical focus on the discursive aspects of the perplexity of sustainable development-related knowledge, our analysis sheds light onto the contested nature of marketplace knowledge and the political and power struggles that sustainable development entails at the level of consumers everyday realities. Our study therefore contributes to a better understanding of the ways in which ordinary, everyday microlevel discursive activity is implicated in complex political struggles where conflicting macrolevel institutionalized discourses of sustainable consumption (Berg 2011; Fuchs and Lorek 2005; Schaefer and Crane 2005) are appropriated and contested. It also illustrates how, as a result of this discursive activity, particular outcomes with empowering and disempowering effects may arise (Livesey 2001; Livesey et al. 2009; Maguire and Hardy 2006). The paper is organized as follows. In the following section, we elaborate on the theoretical perspective that we build in our paper to study the knowledge-to-action gap as an outcome of discursive struggle and confusion. Then, we present the methodology of our study and the empirical findings that illustrate our theoretical argument. To conclude, we briefly discuss the implications of our argument for consumer and environmental policy.

Discursive Perspective on the Complexity and Perplexity of Environmental Knowledge In this paper, we approach the complexity and perplexity of sustainable developmentrelated knowledge and the knowledge-to-action gap discussed in the literature (see Heiskanen 2005; Pape et al. 2011; Thgersen 2005; Valor 2008) from a discursive, practicebased perspective. Drawing on the culturalist, practice-based approaches to social inquiry and the discourse theoretic work on the concept of discursive struggle (Caruana and Crane 2008; Hardy and Phillips 1999; Hardy et al. 2000; Laine and Vaara 2007; Livesey 2001; Maguire and Hardy 2006; Moisander and Pesonen 2002), in particular, our aim is to articulate a novel theoretical perspective on the knowledge-to-action gap as something that arises from the discursive struggle over proper meanings of sustainable development that is continuously going on in contemporary consumer society. By culturalist perspective, we refer to the epistemological and methodological view that social action needs to be studied and explained by reconstructing the collective structures of knowledge that enable particular socially shared ways of ascribing meaning to the world. These collective knowledge structures, codes, or schemes are socially constructed and provide social actors with interpretive frameworks that allow them to make sense of themselves and world around them in particular ways as well as to behave in corresponding ways (Reckwitz 2002). In this paper, we conceptualize these structures of knowledge as

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discourses, i.e., meaningful codes of knowledge that systematically form the object of which they speak through social practice (Foucault 1979, p. 49). From this perspective, the term discursive refers to the signifying practices, both linguistic and material, through which social actors make sense of objects of knowledge and achieve social order (Hall and [1997] 2009; Moisander and Valtonen 2006; Potter et al. 2007). Discourses shape thinking and practice in the day-to-day of consumers lives by suggesting and endowing people with particular meanings, perspectives, and structures of knowledge that help and guide them to represent the world from particular perspectives (Maguire and Hardy 2006). In doing so, discourses make some ideas about the world and its rules of operation seem more real than others (Livesey et al. 2009). Discourses thus regulate which practices are to be understood as appropriate and desirable in particular contexts and situations (Foucault [1969] 1972; Hall [1997] 2009), thus privileging and prioritizing some practices and marginalizing or silencing otherswhich understandably results in particular concrete and symbolic effects on the conditions of possibility for social action in different contexts (Caruana and Crane 2008; Denegri-Knott et al. 2006; Maguire and Hardy 2006). As such, discourses necessarily also embody relations of power and conflict, and thus entail a specific political dimension in limiting individuals ability to act in relation to a particular topic (Denegri-Knott et al. 2006; Foucault 1982; see also Hall 1996). To illustrate, Fuchs and Lorek (2005), among others, have identified two different approaches to sustainable consumption: A weak and strong approach to sustainable consumption: approaches prioritizing efficiency and sufficiency respectively (Berg 2011; Hobson 2002; Princen 2003; Seyfang 2005). While efficiency-based approaches support principles sensitive to technical and economic aims, sufficiency-based approaches take issue with establishing consumption and production levels that fall within natural limits (also Greening et al. 2000). These two approaches to sustainable development and, by implication, sustainable consumption, can thus be understood as drawing on different discourses, enmeshed in complex networks of power relations, which offer different structures of knowledge for people to make sense of sustainable development and to behave accordingly. In environmental and consumer policy, we suggest, discursive activity therefore has a significant constituting role in establishing and sustaining the mechanisms and relations of power that organize and regulate the field of sustainable development (Hardy and Phillips 1999; Laine and Vaara 2007; Livesey et al. 2009; Maguire and Hardy 2006). The significant role that these questions of struggle, conflict and power play in sustainable development is illustrated by Hobson (2002), for example, who studied the ways in which individuals negotiate sustainable consumption practices in the empirical context of a sustainable lifestyles programme that emphasized the increased efficiency of household consumption practices. In Hobsons study, the programme participants were offered environmental information so as to encourage and empower them to change their daily consumption practices. The programme, however, largely failed to do so because the participants reportedly felt anger and personally distanced from the project, complaining that it failed to address important questions about global justice and the practical barriers of sustainable consumption. In contemporary consumer society, discursive activity thus takes place in an unstable polyphonic space where different discourses interpolate one another (Livesey 2001, p. 63; see also Thompson and Haytko 1997). As a result, discursive practices necessarily involve contestation, negotiation, and discursive struggle over meaning (Hardy and Phillips 1999; Hardy et al. 2000; Maguire and Hardy 2006). By discursive struggle, we refer here to

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the dialogical struggle (or struggles) as reflected in the privileging of a particular discourse and the marginalization of others (Hardy and Phillips 1999, p. 3). In this paper, we wish to focus attention on the implications that this discursive polyphony and struggle have for the education and empowerment of individuals in sustainable development. As different discourses create different conditions of possibility for consumers to act in a particular context (Denegri-Knott et al. 2006), it would seem necessary to better understand how the prevalent discourses of sustainable development currently shape consumers field of possible action in the marketplace (Livesey et al. 2009; Moisander [2001] 2008; Seyfang 2005). A critical analysis of these different discourses would seem to help us better understand how the particular social and cultural context in which consumers currently operate in the market makes available, intelligible, and desirable particular ways of thinking, and how these discourses guide and constrain the ways in which consumers are enabled to make sense of their roles and responsibilities in the pursuit of sustainable development. To illustrate, if the discourses that are available or dominant in societyor in the immediate sociocultural contexts where consumers make their choices in the marketrepresent sustainable consumption primarily in terms of efficiency, as discussed above, individual consumers are not necessarily empowered to engage in the more sufficiency-based sustainable consumption practices. It is important to point out, however, that as researchers, we are also inevitably subjects of power, operating in particular discursive fields and (re)producing its particular relations of power through our own discursive activity (Moisander [2001] 2008). Therefore, we are also morally responsible for the kind of social realities we (re)produce through our research (Moisander and Valtonen 2006). What we can do, however, is to provide people with new concepts and ideas that open up a number of alternative perspectives on the roles and responsibilities of consumers in sustainable development (Livesey et al. 2009) and, ultimately, to raise consciousness (Hacking 1999; Schneider and Ingram 2008). We argue, therefore, that to empower consumers and to bridge the knowledge-to-action gap, it is necessary for academic researchers, policy practitioners, non-governmental organizations, and social movements alike to critically analyse the prevalent discourses and possibly also actively engage in the discursive struggle over sustainable development that is going on in contemporary consumer society.

Empirical Context, Methods, and Materials As an empirical case that illustrates our theoretical argument, we present findings from a study that focuses on discursive struggle over the meanings of sustainable consumption in the context of fashion and clothing markets. The study is based on a qualitative, discourse theoretical analysis of interview data collected in Finland by means of personal, semistructured interviews. The aim of the empirical analysis was to explore the discursive practices through which consumers make sense of their roles and responsibilities as fashion and clothing consumers in sustainable development, so as to identify the different culturally standardized or institutionalized discourses that were available to them and the possible discursive struggle that the existence of these multiple discourses might involve. Context: Fashion and Clothing Markets The fashion and clothing sector makes up a significant part of the global economy and has a significant impact on sustainable development on a global scale (Allwood et al. 2006;

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Morris and Barnes 2009). In recent years, sustainability concerns in the sector have led to a number of non-governmental organizations and business-led initiatives towards more sustainable production and consumption patterns (e.g., Better Cotton Initiative 2011; Clean Clothes Campaign 2011; DEFRA 2010; Ethical Fashion Forum 2011; Nordic Fashion Association 2011), and a variety of books, magazines, and web sites have been published for both professionals and consumers (see, e.g., www.ecotextile.com; www.sustainablestyle. org). Moreover, sustainability issues have also been a subject of thematic issues in journals (Beard 2008) and books in fashion studies (Black 2008; Fletcher 2008; Hethorn and Ulasewitz 2008). As new green and ethical product alternatives have made their way onto high street retail clothing chains (Joergens 2006) and corporate responsibility initiatives have started to play a central role in the sectors business practices (Iwanow et al. 2005; Shaw et al. 2006), increasing academic interest has emerged towards topics such as fair trade practices, corporate social responsibility initiatives, sustainable consumption communication by businesses, organic cotton, environmental impacts of production, clothing usage and disposal practices, clothing exchanges, clothing recycling, and second-hand clothing (Birtwistle and Moore 2007; Iwanow et al. 2005; Joergens 2006; Jones et al. 2010; Niinimki 2009; Pears 2005; Rudell 2006; Shaw et al. 2006). This body of research has identified a number of challenges that consumers face when trying to choose more sustainably produced clothes. An important general problem is, for example, that clothing markets lack product alternatives, product information, and labels that inform consumers about production conditions (Birtwistle and Moore 2007; Joergens 2006; Niinimki 2009; Shaw et al. 2006). And the many raw materials and highly complex production processes that characterize the industry further complicate consumers sustainability evaluations (Allwood et al. 2006; Fletcher 2008). Despite the general emphasis placed in todays culture on aspects of design in creating commercial success (Postrel 2003; Venkatesh et al. 2010), moreover, the selection of ecological and ethical garments is also often very limited and the products are often perceived as unattractive and unfitting to some degree (Joergens 2006). And yet, the premium price charged for the more sustainably produced garments means that they are niche products targeted primarily to affluent consumers (Beard 2008; Joergens 2006; Shaw et al. 2006). Finally, the judgments that consumers need to make can also be complex in terms of development goals: Consumers can face ethical dilemmas when choosing between home country-produced clothes and fair trade-produced clothes from developing countries (Shaw et al. 2006). Part of the clothing sectors sustainability challenges has been attributed to the sectors prevalent business strategy, which relies on continuous change (Allwood et al. 2006; Fletcher 2008). Recent years have also seen an increasing interest in the sector to apply a strategy known as fast fashion (Joy et al. 2011; Morgan and Birtwistle 2009; Hethorn and Ulasewitz 2008). This strategy relies on increased purchase frequency of more affordable garments that are expected to be used for shorter periods, thereby increasing the material output and waste volumes of the sector (Allwood et al. 2006; Black 2008). Although the use of the concept of fashion as a planned, continuous change has been appropriated across a number of other industrial sectors as well (Blaszczyk 2008; Strasser 2003; see also Tadajewski 2009), continuous change is still applied as a business strategy in its most accelerated forms in the clothing markets. For these reasons, the fashion and clothing markets arguably constitute an illuminating empirical context for exploring contemporary sustainability challenges, practices of over-consumption in particular (Kjellberg 2008; Shankar et al. 2006; Skln et al. 2007).

Discursive Confusion over Sustainable Consumption

Empirical Data and Methods The empirical findings reported in this paper are based on qualitative consumer interviews (Silverman and [1993] 2006; Moisander et al. 2009) conducted in Finland, one of the leading SCP programme countries (Berg 2011), with 18 young 2535-year-old urban professionals, who lived and worked in the Helsinki metropolitan area. The participant profiles are presented in Table 1 of Appendix 1. The interviewees were selected based on a snowball sample (Creswell 1998) of young, relatively well-educated adults who had full-time jobs. Given the educational background and potential income levels of the interviewees, there is reason to believe that the sample of interviewees obtained here represents consumers who have the necessary cultural capital and economic means to act as ecologically oriented consumers, and thus function as a powerful positive market force in the pursuit of sustainable development (Joergens 2006). In line with the theoretical approach adopted in this study, it is also assumed that this interview material provides us with access to the broader culturally shared meanings and context in which the interviewees operate (Silverman and [1993] 2006; Thompson 1997; Thompson and Haytko 1997). Consequently, our analysis can be viewed as illustrative of the social realities that consumers face in contemporary advanced market-mediated societies. The interviews were carried out following the basic guidelines of open-ended interviews (Thompson et al. 1989). However, to ensure that all relevant topics were covered, the interviews were conducted in a semi-structured format (Joy et al. 2009). Towards this end, also textual elicitation material was used (Moisander and Valtonen 2006). The material consisted of a short news story (Fashion chains did not excel in an ethics survey) and an eco-shopping guide (Guide for eco-shopper). The news story dealt with an ethics survey among fashion retailers, which was published on the website of the leading national newspaper, Helsingin Sanomat. The eco-shopping guide focused on clothing shopping. The guide was accessible at the website of the Finnish Consumer Agency and it was apparently designed to encourage individuals to modify their consumption towards more sustainable practices (Thgersen and Crompton 2009). The translated elicitation materials and the interview guide are exhibited in Appendices 2 and 3. The interviews lasted from 30 to 60 min and took place in the interviewees homes and offices or nearby cafs. All the interviews were recorded and transcribed in verbatim, resulting in 167 pages of text in Finnish (Times New Roman, 12 pt., single-line spacing). The excerpts presented in this paper were translated into English during the analysis. To analyse the data, a form of discourse analysis was employed. As discourse analysis can take various forms (Alvesson and Karreman 2000; Wood and Kroger 2000), it is important to specify our approach. Inspired by the work of Ian Hacking (2004) as well as Jaber Gubrium and James Holstein (2003), who suggest combining the seminal work of Michel Foucault (e.g., Foucault 1972 [1969], 2008 [1979]) and ethnomethodology (e.g., Potter et al. 2007), we focused both on the Foucauldian macrolevel culturally standardized or institutionalized discourses and on the ways in which they are made sense of at the ethnomethodological microlevel of consumers everyday discursive realities (see also Miller 1997; Moisander and Valtonen 2006). The analytical focus, in our study, was thus on the ways in which particular accounts of sustainable consumption were constructed in the interplay of discursive practices and institutionalized discourses of sustainable development (Moisander and Valtonen 2006). This perspective is based on a performative view of representation and language as something that not only reflects objects of knowledge that are out there or provides

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unproblematic access to peoples real intentions and perceptions of reality but also constitutes particular versions of this reality (Schwandt 2000). More specifically, to analyse the empirical material, we carefully studied the particular wordings and categorizations used in the interview texts as well as the explicit and implicit norms in that these texts involved (Moisander and Valtonen 2006). The analysis was carried out through a process of close hermeneutic, iterative back-and-forth reading of the empirical material and the theoretical background literature, in which empirical material and theoretical concepts were continuously matched up (Thompson and Haytko 1997) to develop an understanding of the phenomenon at both micro- and macrolevels of discursive reality (Hacking 2004). Emerging themes were first provisionally labelled and then scrutinized during subsequent readings. No qualitative data analysis software was used as we felt that this might have impeded the development of a sufficiently nuanced understanding and rich description of the phenomenon (Silverman 2000). Next, we move on to discuss our findings. In the data excerpts that we present, the lines of the respondents are indicated with R and the lines of the interviewer with I. Words and texts that have been omitted from the excerpts are marked with [].

Consumer Engagement in Struggles over Sustainable Consumption To illustrate our argument, we now move on to elaborate on the ways in which the consumers interviewed for our study refer to and engage in a number of discursive struggles over sustainable consumption. In making and giving sense to their roles and responsibilities as ecologically responsible consumers, they cite and engage in three discursive struggles that deal with (1) the economic trade-off between material prosperity and sustainable development; (2) the political debate on the respective responsibilities and possibilities of individual vs. institutional actors to make a difference by acting upon large-scale social problems such as sustainable development; (3) the aesthetic dilemma of choosing between contemporary fashion wear, which are aesthetically pleasing but ecologically unsound, and used or ecologically produced clothes, which are ecologically sound but aesthetically unpleasing. The consumers that we interviewed refer to these struggles particularly when they make sense of the global context of sustainability challenges, negotiate their personal moral and political responsibilities, and reject the aesthetic and behavioural norms that prevalent cultural representations of ecological awareness impose on them. Making Sense of the Global Context of Sustainability Challenges: Struggle Between the Discursive Logics of Financial Performance and Ecological Sustainability When talking about the sustainable consumption in the global fashion and clothing markets, the consumers that we interviewed for the study discuss sustainable development as a global challenge that necessarily entails conflict of interests between profit-seeking economic actors and morally responsible, ecologically minded citizens. In making sense of this conflict, the interviewees come to engage in a well-known discursive struggle that revolves around the debate on the trade-off between financial and environmental performanceand the associated discussion on the trade-off between economic growth and sustainable development. For global fashion and clothing corporations, sustainability and financial performance are represented as inevitably opposing, mutually exclusive goals. The interviewees take it for granted, in their talk, that contemporary market-based societies are largely ruled by corporate interests, and that business organizations are primarilyand quite rightly so

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concerned with their financial performance (see also Jones et al. 2010; Valor 2008). As the following extract illustrates, from this perspective, corporate goals other than financial performance may well seem merely amusing: R: I found it amusing when it was on the news yesterday that Marimekko [a Finnish designer company] was totally terrified [to learn], that Oh no, we are getting cotton from iffy sources cotton collected by children! [] And yet, it was only, like, around the end of last week that they announced their collaboration with Hennes and Mauritz. I: Well what did you think of it then? R: OK, they probably take care of their own nest. Like Lets now cut the supplies coming from these suspicious sources. [] if I had been responsible for corporate social responsibility at Marimekko, I would have, at the least, raised quite a lot of discussion there about whether to start collaboration with some Hennes and Mauritz. I mean, OK, even if [the collaboration] provides tremendous visibility, they [Hennes and Mauritz] have, in every case, been under all kinds of suspicions as regards the use of child labour, or unsustainable production in general. 7F According to this discursive logic, any attempt by the business organizations to pursue values other than profit-maximization and shareholder value are deemed to fail. The following extract illustrates, for example, how reports of companies trying to improve their ecological footprints are discursively discredited through expressions such as trying to make an effort, and discounted as acts of hypocrisy and image polishing (see also Joergens 2006), as the following quote further illustrates: R: [] sometimes it just seems hypocritical when some clothing chains try to do something, make an effort to do something. Its like, well, it feels that they just are just trying to polish their image, because thats what it is anyway. I: Do you have any examples of that? Does something come to your mind? R: I do not even know who has tried to do something Except Hennes and Mauritz has this, kind of organic some sort of [ecological] collection of clothes. Whatever! So yes, that is in a way a major effort, that one. But in the middle of all that other crap [they produce] it feels so small, like Lets produce a little bit [more ecological clothes] for those who want it; Lets produce these clothes just a little bit more ethically, lets use just a little bit less chemical substances of all sorts. 5F Here, the seemingly positive sustainability measure of introducing an organic clothing line into a major retailers collections is dismissed by representing it as production that is based on the use of just a little bit less chemical substances for a marginal market segment. Using specific disparaging and dismissive metaphors, vocabularies, and juxtapositions, the interviewees represent corporate efforts to engage in environmental management as fake, as something that does not qualify as a genuine or serious effort to contribute to sustainable development. This juxtaposition of financial and environmental performance reflects a more general currently ongoing discursive struggle that deals with the trade-off between economic growth and sustainable development (e.g., Joergens 2006; Livesey 2002). By representing financial and environmental performance as mutually exclusive corporate objectives, the interviewees come to construct sustainability as a general threat to economic development and prosperity (Jackson 2009), particularly in developing countries where much of the fashion and clothing production

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takes place. On the one hand, according to this logic, business strategies of corporations that deal in fast fashion may well be regarded ecologically unsound. But on the other hand, the activities of these corporations stimulate economic growth, providing people with employment and improving the quality of life in developing countries (also Joergens 2006). And for many, it is these human needs that come first, as the following quote illustrates: R: In my worldview, it is people who take the priority. After [considering human needs], perhaps, one can consider whether a bit more nature is being consumed. Or not necessary whether more nature has been consumed but resources at a more general level. [] like if a shirt has an environmental certificate and has been made without using particular cleaning methods, that does not feel equally important, if you can see my point. 17M In the discursive struggle over consumers roles and responsibilities in the globalized marketplace, consumption hence emerges as important for keeping the economy up and running, for making sure that enough money is being spent so that everybody has a job, as one of the interviewees put it (9F). From an economic perspective, fashion as the planned, constant introduction of new styles is instrumental for keeping the economy and the welfare society up and running, as well as for assuring the happiness of all members of society (Fuchs and Lorek 2005; Hilton 2007). And this seems to suggest rather fundamental, persisting constraints for consumers to move towards stronger, sufficiency-based forms of sustainable consumption. If cutting down the level of consumption means increasing unemployment and a general reduction in human wellbeing, the decision not to consume seems not only unattractive but also irresponsible and even selfish. As moral and responsible societal actors, consumers are not to be narrowminded in being only concerned about the environment but rather focus on promoting prosperity and human well-being, particularly for people in the third world. Negotiating Consumers Roles and Responsibilities: Struggle Between the Discursive Logics of Individual and Institutional Change When negotiating their roles and responsibilities as ecologically responsible consumers, the interviewees refer to and engage in a discursive struggle that revolves around the political debate on the respective responsibilities and possibilities of individual versus institutional market actors to make a difference in the collective pursuit of sustainable development. While the individualist discourse on sustainable development emphasizes that social change begins with and is brought about by morally concerned individuals who take personal responsibility to change the world, the collectivist discourse calls for institutional and systemic solutions that bring about social change. In much of the public discussion on sustainable development, consumers are given an important role as important market actors and key change agents in the path to sustainable global economy (Moisander [2001] 2008; Seyfang 2005; Schaefer and Crane 2005). But from the perspective of individual consumers, the idea of tackling large-scale sustainability challenges by making small, apparently insignificant efforts does not seem particularly reasonable or even fair. As one of the interviewees sarcastically explains: R: For quite some time, I washed all [my] tops and knits by hand so that they would last longer [] [but] then, for a couple of years, I lived with a housemate [who] had no problem whatsoever throwing all [her] garments in the washer. And for a year I kept on splishing and splashing, [washing my tops] in that bathroom sink And typically my housemate would have her garments clean and dry the next day, while I

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would still have mine on the line, dribbling water all over the bathroom. So finally I said to myself, Hold it! Seriously! A [Hennes and Mauritz] top, should I really be hand-washing it! Well, perhaps [the top] lasts a bit longer But then again, it fails to meet every [criterion] in this [eco-shopping guide]! So great! I bought this childlabour-produced, not-so-long-lasting [garment] and blah, blah, blah But I did handwash it: I did try to take responsibility for this unethical world! 13F As the extract above illustrates, the idea of taking responsibility for the unethical world by hand-washing unsustainably produced garments as an attempt to deal with largescale social and environmental problems is apparently problematic or even ridiculous. Moreover, considering what has become understood as normal in terms of the pace of living (Haunstrup Christensen et al. 2007; Shove 2003), the option of expending ones precious free time on hand-washing garments to be able to use them longerand having them dribbling water the next day, as the interviewee above complainsseems increasingly unattractive even for the committed green consumer. The skepticism regarding the possibilities of individual ecologically responsible consumers to make a difference may also be observed in the ways in which the interviewees make sense of the significance of eco-labels and environmental information in sustainable consumption. In the presence of multiple labelling schemes and conflicting sources of information, consumers are effectively left without institutional support for making informed and rational decisions, as the following quote illustrates: R: I do need to say that all those [labeling schemes] and environmental certificates and the like [] there are too many of them. They have totally lost their significance. Because they are, of course, one of the ways in which environmental organizations collect funds. 18M Overall, the consumers that we interviewed engage with the individualist discourse of sustainable development by representing themselves as disempowered individuals, frustrated and unable to perform the roles ascribed to them as powerful market forces and key change agentsresponsible for not only their own conduct but also for influencing globally operating corporations and political decision makers to take action in sustainable development. In the following extract, for example, one of the interviewees illustrates this disempowerment, attributing the frustration to a lack of power that individual fashion consumers experience when dealing with the increasingly complex global supply chains: R: Who can control the entire supply chain, [including] the suppliers of the suppliers suppliers suppliers? One should be able to control [the entire chain of suppliers]. That should absolutely be the goal at which to aim. And I would personally be willing to pay X Euros more for clothes if I could be guaranteed that it is [all ethical throughout the supply chain]. For example, Gap has this [brand called] (PRODUCT) RED . [] I, for example, have bought some [(PRODUCT) RED] childrens wear and I think they are wonderful. [] Some of the [profits from that product line] are donated for the fight against AIDS in Africa [] And, as a consumer, Im happy to pay a bit more for [these clothes]. But then, on the other hand, we hear the news that Gap uses [child labor]! So, as a consumer, you are lost, in way, if you do not grow our own cotton and make it into fabric yourself. 11F As the extract above illustrates, for individual market actors global supply chains that operate using a long chain of subcontractors constitute a major sustainability challenge that resides outside the field of their possible action. For instance, a consumer who chooses

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ethically produced alternatives and happily pays a bit more for it is represented as being lost in the marketplace when confronted by disquieting information about a allegedly ethically responsible manufacturers multiple conflicting ethical standards for its production units, of which some are ethically acceptable and some others not. Similarly, individual decision makers and managers working for transnational corporations are represented as unable to control production practices in faraway production sites that are part of whole chain of subcontractors, as the following extract illustrates: R: Well, no wonder that more than 30 European clothing chains are lacking ethical guidelines [] Obviously, somebody has to decide how the supply chain functions and who does what. But even when a single manager decides [about these things], this manager cannot necessarily manage [his/her] counterparts in the chain. Since cotton is not grown in Finland, these things are difficult to verify. And even if you went to some place next to Niagara to check the [cotton] fields, how can you know that the local boss is not taking you to the wrong field, that they dont, in reality, cultivate the field using child labor? that they show you some organic field that is staged there? Or, that the children have been sent out to have a break and some food. I really am quite skeptical. 9F Overall, referring to the moral and practical complexities of sustainable consumption, coupled with the challenges of monitoring practices at distant production sites, the interviewees thus represent individual consumers as excluded and marginalized actors in the pursuit of sustainable development. They have essentially no ability to oppose and act against unethical business practices that take place in global, distant supply chains. The roles and responsibilities given for consumers to act in sustainable ways simply clash with the normal and reasonable ways of conducting ones life, i.e., the collective conventions of everyday life (Shove 2003). From this perspective, rather than depicting sustainability as something that would come about on its own, sustainability is represented as something that calls for regulations and strong enforcement or a different type of large-scale governance (Fuchs and Lorek 2005). From this perspective, the metanarrative of the influence of consumer marketplace choice (Caruana and Crane 2008) is thus problematized. Green consumers are thus represented as dispersed, disempowered individuals, who practically lack the support of institutional actors in their attempts to pursue sustainable development. Rejecting the Aesthetic Norms of the Green Dress Code: Struggle Between the Discursive Logics of Fast Fashion and Sustainable Consumption When making sense of themselves as fashion consumers, the people we interviewed refer to an aesthetic dilemma; as ecologically responsible consumers, they would need to choose between contemporary fashion wear, which is aesthetically pleasing but ecologically unsound, and used or ecologically produced clothes, which are ecologically sound but aesthetically unpleasing. This dilemma arises from the observation that the aesthetic norms of the green dress code essentially contradict, at least in the Finnish context, with the aesthetic preferences of the normal consumer, who wants to look good and show good taste, as the following extract illustrates: R: But, you know, in my opinion, there is this basic problem, overall, for example, with organic or Fair Trade products and such I mean I have seen some ethically produced

Discursive Confusion over Sustainable Consumption

clothes and usually they look really [ugly]. In principle, what should be thought about first is the design. [It is the design] that adds value for normal consumersof which I consider myself to be one. [] But like some organic wines, usually [ecological clothes lines] are really awful. So, it is like a false illusion [to believe] that if something is made out of, lets say, hemp, or if something is produced ecologically, that is enough [for the consumer], and that [the concrete product] can then be of any kind of [junk]. 4M Similar constructions of the particularity, unattractiveness, and ugliness of ecological clothing in stylistic and aesthetics terms are systematically brought up in the material. It is pointed out that to be ecologically responsible consumer, a person needs to reject the aesthetic and behavioural norms that the world of fast fashion suggests and even imposes on them. For sustainable consumption, this is a major challenge since ordinary consumers do not necessarily feel good about making radical stylistic changes (Joergens 2006) or accept trade-offs in questions style and taste (Fletcher 2008; see also Postrel 2003; Venkatesh et al. 2010). In dealing with this aesthetic dilemma, however, the interviewees seek new alternative modes of being and consuming that help them to overcome the dilemma. An interviewee, for example, who is interested in ecological clothing but faces the fact that the contemporary fast fashion chains offer more affordable and aesthetically pleasing products, presents the following solution to the dilemma: R: So one thing that I have personally tried to aim at is that I do not want to have an awful lot of clothes. I rather put [the clothes] that I have to good use. And I [try not to] buy an awful lot. Therefore, I am now trying to create a more consistent [wardrobe], because I do not really need a lot. 14F This solution is based on the idea of establishing a personally satisfying aesthetic style by rejecting not only unattractive and unfitting ecological and ethical clothes but also the logic of fast fashion. This alternative strategy for sustainable consumption thus implies rejecting the idea of being fashionable, trendy, or up to date by wearing the latest fashion. Sustainable consumption is rather achieved simply by buying fewer but personally satisfying products, which have a story, for example, and which last and look good longer, such as what the interviewees refer to as timeless fashion. In doing so, they thus come to mobilize strategies that draw on the stronger approaches to sustainable consumption, which advocate changes in peoples consumption patterns that involve more radical changes than merely starting to choose eco-modernized products. From this perspective, both the idea of the ecological consumer as an austere subject who unproblematically prioritizes environmental concerns over style and design, and the fashion-oriented consumer who uncritically follows the changing trends that the fashion system continuously brings about, are rejected as morally problematic. More sustainable consumption is rather made sense in terms of not only acquiring fewer products but also with longer and more meaningful relationships with the material goods. This seems to suggest a different interpretation of materialism and the material and human relationships, which are interconnected in the practices of production and consumption (Heiskanen 2005). Consequently, as a result of consumers dialogical appropriation of the fashion and sustainable consumption discourses (Hobson 2002; Thompson 1997), an alternative reality of more meaningful and potentially more sustainable consumption practices emerges.

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Conclusions In this paper, our aim has been to conceptually elaborate and empirically illustrate the nature and implications of the discursive polyphony and the perplexity of information and knowledge that consumers face when striving for ecologically sustainable lifestyles and consumption practices. We have argued that part of the knowledge-to-action gap discussed in the literature (Heiskanen 2005; Pape et al. 2011; Valor 2008) can be attributed to a discursive confusion that arises from a simultaneous existence of multiple, continuously changing and partly clashing discourses on sustainable consumption. By means of an empirical study, we elaborated on the ways in which consumers deal with this discursive confusion by citing and engaging in three discursive struggles, which deal with (1) the economic trade-off between material prosperity and sustainable development; (2) the political debate on the respective responsibilities and possibilities of individual versus institutional actors in sustainable development; and (3) the aesthetic dilemma that arises from the conflicting aesthetic norms of the world of fast fashion and sustainable consumption. Our study contributes to the literature on consumer policy studies by advancing our understanding of the ways in which ordinary, everyday microlevel discursive activity is implicated in complex political struggles (Berg 2011; Fuchs and Lorek 2005; Schaefer and Crane 2005), and how, as a result of this discursive activity, particular outcomes with empowering and disempowering effects may arise (Livesey 2001; Livesey et al. 2009; Maguire and Hardy 2006). On the one hand, our study suggests that the discursive confusion that arises from these struggles over appropriate approaches to sustainable development and sustainable consumption may significantly limit and constrain consumers possibilities to engage in more sustainable consumption practices. Our findings thus lend support to recent studies that have argued that sustainability-related messages could become overpowered by opposing ones (e.g., Fuchs and Lorek 2005). On the other hand, however, our analysis also illustrates how in the midst of these discursive struggles consumers simultaneously mobilize alternative strategies for sustainable consumption, in their search for more positive self-identities as responsible consumers. It illustrates how new discourses and discursive practices may emerge as different discourses clash in the ongoing discursive struggle (Livesey 2001). We acknowledge that our study has focused only on a limited sample of consumers and that their views of fashion and sustainability are not generally representative of any broader cohort of people. Regarding the generalizability of our findings, it seems worthwhile to emphasize that our purpose has been to work towards a better understanding of the ways in which consumers engage in discursive struggle when making sense of their roles in sustainable development. Our aim is thus not to say anything about how they think or feel as individuals or how typical or widespread the discursive practices and struggles that we identify are within consumer society in general. Rather, our purpose is to offer some clarification and to raise critical questions about the cultural conditions of possibility for consumers to take responsibility and action for sustainable development. Nevertheless, there is reason to believe that the views of our participants do emerge from contemporary ways of understanding and experiencing sustainable consumption and that similar struggles are being experienced by a wider variety of western consumers. By way of conclusion, we argue that for bridging the knowledge-to-action gap in sustainable consumption, it would seem important to provide consumers with environmental information that makes available multiple different positive ways of

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thinking, talking, and acting upon sustainable development, and to reduce the discursive confusion that arises from discursive struggle. Policy practitioners would therefore need to be conscious of and make more explicit the particular version or versions of sustainable development that underlie the particular policy measures that they advocate for promoting sustainable consumption practices. When designing environmental policy instruments and programmes, it would seem important that consumer policy makers explicitly consider and elaborate on a number of alternative approaches to sustainable development and consumption, critically reflecting upon the political implications and debates that each approach involves. By offering consumers a number of somewhat different, coherent, and effective options, they might be able to reduce discursive confusion in the market and help consumers take more active roles not only as ecologically enlightened shoppers but also politically active citizens, who take responsibility for sustainable development in a number of different ways. This might well result in an improved availability of effective practical definitions of sustainability (Livesey and Kearins 2002) that are based on explicitly acknowledging the inherently contested nature of sustainable development. Moreover, it would seem important to realize that different social and cultural contexts enable and constrain sustainable consumption practices in different ways (Heiskanen 2005) and that it is therefore important to provide different discursive resources for different contexts. While in some contexts, it might be necessary to provide knowledge and information that addresses the trade-off between economic growth and sustainable development, in other contexts the focus of environmental communication should be placed on the aesthetic dilemma of choosing between beauty and sustainability that we discuss here, which style-oriented fashion consumers may experience when trying to engage in ecologically sustainable consumption practices. Moreover, if fashion and clothing consumers are simply not able to choose the more sustainable products for practical reasons (e.g., limited assortments, measurements, and styles), they should be offered alternative ways of contributing to sustainable development (e.g., by buying less and choosing longlasting garments). This would also mean that in addition to ethical and environmental values also aesthetic values, related to product design, for example (Postrel 2003), would need to be emphasized (Allwood et al. 2006; Birtwistle and Moore 2007; Fletcher 2008). Overall, there would seem to be a need for consumer policy makers to shift their focus from simply informing and educating individual consumers to more systemic measures that are based on acting upon not only consumer perceptions, knowledge, and attitudes but also on the broader cultural and political contextsthe field of possible actionwhere consumers live their everyday lives. Policies and measures that rely on the individual consumer to initiate and work towards change would seem to be based on a somewhat unrealistic, over-optimistic view of the cultural and material reality where consumers are to take responsibility for sustainability. In practice, this might imply more open discussion on the roles and responsibilities of not only consumers but also other market and societal actors in sustainable development. In fashion and clothing markets, for example, business representatives have long tended to deny that the contemporary fashion system had any significant role in driving overconsumption (Fuchs and Lorek 2005; Jones et al. 2010). However, to empower consumers to take responsibility for sustainable development, it would seem essential that all parties openly acknowledge the fact that the fashion industry, through complex networks of cultural mediators and economic actors, has an important role in shaping the collective conventions of normal practice (Shove 2003) in ways that constitute a major challenge for sustainable development (Kjellberg 2008; Moisander et al. 2010).

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Appendix 1

Table 1 Participant profiles Codea Sex Age Profession 1F 2F 3F 4M 5F 6F 7F F F F M F F F 25 25 27 25 26 33 26 Youth counsellor Social services worker Integration and verification engineer Marketing manager Clothing shoppingb Aleksi 13, Sokos, JC, Stockmann H&M, Only, Vero Moda Tiger of Sweden, Minus, Boutique Deb, Diesel, Stockmann, Mango, abroad Bisquit Stush, Popot, Helsinki 10, Beamhill

Social services worker, church Anywhere, flea markets youth worker, theatre student Marketing assistant Programming specialist Vero Moda, from fiends, flea markets Stockmann, Aleksi 13, KappAhl, Lindex, Sokos, Zio, small shops, and boutiques, young designers, arts and crafts stores, self-made Self-made, flea markets, from friends, abroad, online Zara, Mango, Vila, Vero Moda, H&M, Moda, Sokos, Seppl, Aleksi 13, Piccola Donna Stockmann, H&M, abroad

8F 9F 10F

F F F

30 31 27

Production manager Area sales manager Coordinator, part-time postgraduate studies, entrepreneur Project manager Accounting specialist Finance manager Assistant Consultant Sales manager Key account manager Pricing and procurement coordinator

11F 12F 13F 14F 15F 16M 17M 18M


a

F F F F F M M M

31 27 31 28 31 29 34 25

From abroad, Zara, Filippa K, Stockmann, H&M, Gant, showroom sales Abroad, shops, flea markets, from a friend Mainly from high street chains, Zara, H&M, shoes and bags abroad, Nine West H&M, Sokos, Zara, Seppl, Carlings Enele, Stockmann, H&M, abroad, Ralph Lauren, sportswear stores Outlets, airports, city centres Stockmann, Nilson, Jakobsson, Solo, Zara, abroad frequently Large chains, small boutiques

This refers to the codes used in the interview excerpts The clothes shopping contexts (stores selling new clothing) can be grouped as follows: department stores (Aleksi 13, Sokos, Stockmann), clothing chains selling retailers in-house brands (H&M, Only, Vero Moda, Mango, KappAhl, Lindex, Zara, Vila, Seppl, Diesel, Gant, Filippa K, Ralph Lauren), and stores and boutiques selling multiple brands (Bisquit Stush, Popot, Helsinki 10, Moda, JC, Piccola Donna, Carlings, Enele, Nilson, Zio, Jacobsson, Solo)

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Appendix 2. Elicitation Materials


Eco-shopping guide
List for clothing shopping
Pivi Talvenmaa: Textiles and the environment. A basic Finnish guide published in 1998, also available online. Paying attention to clothing use and care pays off. Most of a garments environmental impact arises in the usage phase, not in production. Information on textile dyeing

Choose long-lasting quality. Cheap textiles have often been produced in environment-consumptive ways. Do not demand unnecessary finishings in textiles. They are environment- and textile-consumptive. Look for timeless fashion. This way the garment is never out of fashion. Take good care of the textile, modify it and re-fashion it. This prolongs its life. Make use of flea markets. Recycle unnecessary textiles to be re-used. Favor textiles in natural colors. Artificial colors include colors that are environmentally harmful. Favor domestic items. The domestic textile industry has improved in environmental issues. Choose an environmentally labeled product. Those can be found, among others, in underwear and childrens wear. Edited by Pauli Vlimki

Extracted from the Finnish Consumer Agencys web site (www.kuluttajavirasto.fi, 10 Oct 2007). Originally published in Finnish.

HS.fi

Clothing chains did not excel in an ethics survey


21.9.2007 STT (The Finnish News Agency) A study conducted by consumer organizations has revealed that clothing chains could improve their ethics. The survey of more than 30 European clothing companies revealed that one in three companies seems to lack adequate ethical guidelines. According to the Consumer Agency, the cleanest sheet among the 12 chains operating in Finland was given to the Swedish company Hennes and Mauritz. However, even the clothes of the top-ranking companies cannot be considered to be fairly produced. More on the web: Article published in the magazine Consumer

Extracted from the Helsingin Sanomats web site (www.hs.fi, 10 Oct 2007). Originally published in Finnish.

A. Markkula, J. Moisander

Appendix 3. Interview Guideline Interview session start: Inform participants about research aims and confidentiality. Explain the interview format (participants hoped to speak freely and only a few pre-designed questions). 1. Opening question: Could you tell me about your fashion and clothing consumption? 2. General themes to be covered (general fashion and clothing consumption): Fashion phenomenon/phenomena: What do you think is fashion? What does it mean if something is in fashion? Favourite shopping places: Where do you go for clothing shopping? Brands: What about brands? Are brands important to you? Consumption, fashion phenomena, and the fashion system: What kind of ideas these cartoons bring to your mind? Cartoon (A): A woman in a shop, selecting trousers, with the caption: Thin pants: The hottest thing since wide pants Cartoon (B): A woman coming home from a shopping spree, saying to a man sitting in the living room reading a newspaper: Im feeling good about myself again! Cartoon (C): A fashion magazine editor sitting behind her desk with two trays, entitled: Totally in and SO last season Ecological and ethical issues: What kind of ideas this cartoon/story/guide brings to your mind? Cartoon (D): Two dogs at the entrance to a flea market, one saying to the other: I think Ill skip this particular market News story Clothing chains did not excel in an ethics survey Shopping guide Guide for eco-shoppers

3. Themes to be covered with the help of elicitation material:

& & &

& & &

4. Closing the session: Are these some issues that you would like comment upon a bit further? Is there something else that you would like to add?

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