TY - BOOK ID - 86047861 TI - The New Meatways and Sustainability : Discourses and Social Practices AU - Kanerva, Minna AU - transcript: Open Library 2020 (Politik) PY - 2021 SN - 3839454336 3837654338 3732854337 PB - Bielefeld transcript Verlag DB - UniCat KW - Food habits. KW - Social change. KW - Sustainable living. KW - Vegetarianism. KW - POLITICAL SCIENCE / History & Theory. KW - Agency. KW - Co-responsibility. KW - Cultured Meat. KW - Democracy. KW - Discourse. KW - Environmental Policy. KW - Flexitarianism. KW - Food Studies. KW - Food. KW - Insects. KW - Nature. KW - Plant-based Meat. KW - Political Science. KW - Political Theory. KW - Politics. KW - Social Practice Theories. KW - Strategic Ignorance. KW - Sustainability. KW - Values. KW - Meatless meals KW - Vegetarian diet KW - Diet KW - Ecological living KW - Green living KW - Living, Sustainable KW - Alternative lifestyles KW - Environmentalism KW - Green movement KW - Change, Social KW - Cultural change KW - Cultural transformation KW - Societal change KW - Socio-cultural change KW - Social history KW - Social evolution KW - Eating KW - Food customs KW - Foodways KW - Human beings KW - Habit KW - Manners and customs KW - Nutrition KW - Oral habits KW - Food habits KW - Sustainability Transformation; Social Practice Theories; Discourse; Values; Strategic Ignorance; Agency; Co-responsibility; Flexitarianism; Cultured Meat; Plant-based Meat; Insects; Food; Food Studies; Nature; Politics; Political Theory; Democracy; Environmental Policy; Sustainability; Political Science UR - https://www.unicat.be/uniCat?func=search&query=sysid:86047861 AB - Social practice theories help to challenge the often hidden paradigms, worldviews, and values at the basis of many unsustainable practices. Discourses and their boundaries define what is seen as possible, as well as the range of issues and their solutions. By exploring the connections between practices and discourses, Minna Kanerva develops a conceptual approach enabling purposive change in unsustainable social practices. Radical transformation towards new meatways is arguably necessary, yet complex psychological, ideological, and power-related mechanisms currently inhibit change. ER -