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Drivers of climate change in urban India : social values, lifestyles, and consumer dynamics in an emerging megacity/ by Meyer-Ohlendorf Lutz

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: Springer ClimatePublication details: Cham: Springer Nature Publishing, 2019.Description: xx, 271p.; 24 cmISBN:
  • 9783319966694
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 363.738 LUT
Contents:
Table of contents 1. Introduction: Climate Change and Lifestyle – The Relevance of New Concepts for Social-Ecological Research 2. Approaches of Measuring Human Impacts on Climate Change 3. The Research Context: India and the Megacity of Hyderabad 4. Conceptualisation and Operationalisation – A Social Geography of Climate Change: Social-Cultural Mentalities, Lifestyle, and Related GHG Emission Effects in Indian Cities 5. Results Part I: Descriptive Analysis of Manifest Variables and Preparation of Latent Components for the Lifestyle Analysis 6. Results Part II: Income, Practice, and Lifestyle-Oriented Analysis of Personal-Level GHG Emissions 7. Discussion 8. Final Conclusions: Understanding Inequalities in Consumption-Based, Personal-Level GHG Emissions References Index
Summary: This study transcends the homogenizing (inter- )national level of argumentation ('rich' versus 'poor' countries), and instead looks at a sub-national level in two respects: (1) geographically it focuses on the rapidly growing megacity of Hyderabad; (2) in socio-economic terms the urban population is disaggregated by taking a lifestyle typology approach. For the first time, the lifestyle concept -traditionally being used in affluent consumer societies - is applied to a dynamically transforming and socially heterogeneous urban society. Methodically, the author includes India-specific value orientations as well as social practices as markers of social structural differentiation. The study identifies differentials of lifestyle-induced GHG emissions (carbon footprints) and underlines the ambiguity of a purely income based differentiation with regard to the levels of contribution to the climate problem. (Source: Worldcat)
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Table of contents
1. Introduction: Climate Change and Lifestyle – The Relevance of New Concepts for Social-Ecological Research
2. Approaches of Measuring Human Impacts on Climate Change
3. The Research Context: India and the Megacity of Hyderabad
4. Conceptualisation and Operationalisation – A Social Geography of Climate Change: Social-Cultural Mentalities, Lifestyle, and Related GHG Emission Effects in Indian Cities
5. Results Part I: Descriptive Analysis of Manifest Variables and Preparation of Latent Components for the Lifestyle Analysis
6. Results Part II: Income, Practice, and Lifestyle-Oriented Analysis of Personal-Level GHG Emissions
7. Discussion
8. Final Conclusions: Understanding Inequalities in Consumption-Based, Personal-Level GHG Emissions
References
Index

This study transcends the homogenizing (inter- )national level of argumentation ('rich' versus 'poor' countries), and instead looks at a sub-national level in two respects: (1) geographically it focuses on the rapidly growing megacity of Hyderabad; (2) in socio-economic terms the urban population is disaggregated by taking a lifestyle typology approach. For the first time, the lifestyle concept -traditionally being used in affluent consumer societies - is applied to a dynamically transforming and socially heterogeneous urban society. Methodically, the author includes India-specific value orientations as well as social practices as markers of social structural differentiation. The study identifies differentials of lifestyle-induced GHG emissions (carbon footprints) and underlines the ambiguity of a purely income based differentiation with regard to the levels of contribution to the climate problem. (Source: Worldcat)

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