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Environmental communication, social practices, and food system transformation

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Detalhes bibliográficos
Resumo:The global food system has significant social and environmental impacts, requiring urgent transformation to address issues such as environmental degradation, food insecurity, and health problems. Communication plays a crucial role in driving this transformation by engaging stakeholders in sustainable and healthy food practices. This chapter examines theoretical frameworks used in environmental communication initiatives for food system transformation. While some initiatives rely on the transmission paradigm, treating communication as the one-way delivery of messages to consumers, others emphasize interaction and the exchange of meaning among active participants. This highlights the importance of co-construction, reflec tion, and learning by doing. The chapter reviews theoretical perspectives that focus on cognition, segmentation, networking, and dialogical aspects of communication, but fall short of adequately addressing the communicative dimensions of social practices in everyday life. To overcome this limitation, I suggest a practice theoretical approach to frame food-related environmental communication dimensions as part of, emerging through, and resulting from bundles and complexes of practices. I then analyze the main shortcomings of a practice-based approach and suggest three avenues for future research in environmental communication to account for the communicative dimensions of social practices in food system transformation.
Autores principais:Truninger, Monica
Assunto:Food system transformation Practice theory Environmental communication Food practices Food system communication Interlocked practices Material Everyday life
Ano:2024
País:Portugal
Tipo de documento:capítulo de livro
Tipo de acesso:acesso restrito
Instituição associada:Universidade de Lisboa
Idioma:inglês
Origem:Repositório da Universidade de Lisboa
Descrição
Resumo:The global food system has significant social and environmental impacts, requiring urgent transformation to address issues such as environmental degradation, food insecurity, and health problems. Communication plays a crucial role in driving this transformation by engaging stakeholders in sustainable and healthy food practices. This chapter examines theoretical frameworks used in environmental communication initiatives for food system transformation. While some initiatives rely on the transmission paradigm, treating communication as the one-way delivery of messages to consumers, others emphasize interaction and the exchange of meaning among active participants. This highlights the importance of co-construction, reflec tion, and learning by doing. The chapter reviews theoretical perspectives that focus on cognition, segmentation, networking, and dialogical aspects of communication, but fall short of adequately addressing the communicative dimensions of social practices in everyday life. To overcome this limitation, I suggest a practice theoretical approach to frame food-related environmental communication dimensions as part of, emerging through, and resulting from bundles and complexes of practices. I then analyze the main shortcomings of a practice-based approach and suggest three avenues for future research in environmental communication to account for the communicative dimensions of social practices in food system transformation.