Citizens and sustainable culinary cultures

bookIn this book chapter, Johanna Mäkelä and Mari Niva investigate the role of lay people as stakeholders in climate change adaptation. Drawing on a practice-theoretical and everyday life approach, they suggest new conceptualizations that serve to bridge between production, manufacturing and consumption. If you are interested in receiving a copy of the book chapter, please contact Mari Niva (mari.niva(at)helsinki.fi).

Mäkelä, J. & Niva, M. (in press). Citizens and sustainable culinary cultures. In: Paloviita, Ari & Järvelä, Marja (2016). Climate change adaptation and food supply change management. London and New York: Routledge: Online: www.tandf.net/books/details/9781317634034/

 

 

Arjen ja pyhän rytmit eri maissa ja erilaisissa kotitalouksissa

Ajassa kiinni ja irrallaan – Yhteisölliset rytmit 2000-luvun Suomessa -julkaisun artikkeleissa käsitellään viikonlopun ajankäyttöä, kiireen kokemuksia, epätyypillisten työaikojen vaikutusta lasten kanssa vietettyyn aikaan, yhdessä vietetyn ajan muutoksia sekä lasten ja nuorten median ja tietokoneen käytön muutoksia. Lisäksi tarkastellaan ajankäyttötietojen käyttöä ilmansaasteille altistumisen arvioimisessa ja energiainfrastruktuurin luomia aikajärjestyksiä. Eri maiden välillä löytyy selviä eroja ajankäytön rytmeissä. Kansainvälisen ajankäyttötutkimuksen aineiston avulla on tarkasteltu arjen ja viikonlopun vuorokausirytmejä Espanjassa, Italiassa, Ranskassa, Isossa-Britanniassa, Ruotsissa ja Suomessa.

Kuluttajatutkimuskeskuksen tutkijat ovat kirjoittajina kahdessa kiinnostavassa artikkelissa:

Pantzar, M. & Pääkkönen, H. (2015). Arjen ja pyhän rytmit kuudessa Euroopan maassa. Teoks. Ajassa kiinni ja irrallaan – Yhteisölliset rytmit 2000-luvun Suomessa. Tilastokeskus, s. 87-98.

Aalto, K. (2015).Lapsettoman nuoren parin ajankäyttö ja rytmit. Teoks. Ajassa kiinni ja irrallaan – Yhteisölliset rytmit 2000-luvun Suomessa. Tilastokeskus, s. 109-122.

Linkki koko julkaisuun löytyy täältä: http://www.tilastokeskus.fi/uutinen/viikonloppuisin-vietetaan-entista-vahemman-aikaa-ystavien-ja-perheen-kanssa

 

Blog post: Big data, public participation, sustainable innovation and the Pullip doll

pullip_disco1

Big data involves enormous, highly complex and unstructured data sets. It tracks activities and collects logs, often in real time. So when you change from one television channel to another, your activity may be saved on a server and potentially be combined with equally minute activities from others.

Are you then participating in public discourse and for the common good? Perhaps you are more than you think.

Read on at http://www.casi2020.eu/blog/posts/big-data-public-participation-sustainable-innovation-and-the-pullip-doll/

Everyday distinction and omnivorous orientation

In recent years, studies on cultural consumption have experienced a Bourdieusian renaissance. This is indicated by a growing body of research analysing distinctions in different areas of culture, and numerous studies on the homology thesis applying the concepts of distinction, field and capital. Concurrently, however, it has been argued that instead of distinctive tastes, distinction and class status are increasingly manifested by cultural omnivorousness. Most studies on distinction in food have analysed eating out and stylization through restaurant preferences, rather than everyday food choices.

In this article, Nina Kahma, Mari Niva, Satu Helakorpi ja Piia Jallioja investigate everyday food choices from the perspective of distinction and omnivorousness. They draw on cross-sectional quantitative data collected in 2012 among 15–64-year-old Finns (N = 2601). The article maps out the relationship between food choice frequencies, dispositions and social background with Multiple Correspondence Analysis (MCA). The results show that the consumption of fruit and vegetables, ready-meals and convenience foods were among the most divisive food choices. The first structuring dimension juxtaposed processed, fatty and sugared foods with unprocessed foods and fresh ingredients. This dimension was associated with healthiness and weight control as dispositions. On the second structuring dimension there were differences in the valuation of taste, pleasure and sociability, and a contrast between moderate and restrictive choices. Particularly the first dimension was associated with educational, occupational, and gender differences. Distinction within everyday food choices was manifested in the use of healthy and unprocessed foods and ‘moderate hedonism’ in contrast to more restrictive tastes.

Article: Kahma, N., Niva, M., Helakorpi, S., & Jallinoja, P. (2016). Everyday distinction and omnivorous orientation: An analysis of food choice, attitudinal dispositions and social background. Appetite, 96, 443-453.