Frontiers in Sustainability | |
Time to care—Care for time—How spending more time for care than consumption helps to mitigate climate change | |
Sustainability | |
Katharina Mader1  Veronika Gaube2  Barbara Smetschka2  | |
[1] Department of Economics, Vienna University of Economics and Business (WU), Vienna, Austria;Institute of Social Ecology (SEC), University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences (BOKU), Vienna, Austria; | |
关键词: climate change; gender studies; quality of life; sustainable consumption; time use; unpaid work; carbon footprint; | |
DOI : 10.3389/frsus.2023.1070253 | |
received in 2022-10-14, accepted in 2023-04-03, 发布年份 2023 | |
来源: Frontiers | |
【 摘 要 】
Mitigating climate change requires urgent reductions in emissions. Demand-side measures focus on footprints (direct and indirect emissions) of consumption. Analyzing time use brings a novel perspective to discuss the carbon implications of everyday life and the potentials and limitations for decarbonizing consumption. In this study, we show how time-use studies can serve as a bridging concept between sustainability studies and the analysis of human wellbeing for all. We introduce a functional time-use perspective differentiating personal, committed, contracted, and free time. We calculate the average carbon intensity of everyday activities in Austria in 2010 combining the Austrian Time-use Survey and Austrian Household Budget Survey with Eora-MRIO. We find that these activities differ widely in carbon intensity. Personal time is relatively low-carbon intense, while free time activities show large variation in terms of CO2e footprint/hour. The traditional gendered division of labor shapes the time-use patterns of women and men, with implications for their carbon footprints. Reassessing and sharing unpaid reproductive caring activities are the basis for solving some urgent ecological and social problems. The way household members use their time, the resource demand of households and infrastructure, and the services provided by communities entail each other. Time use, time prosperity, and especially time scarcity determine our quality of life. Caring activities as “time to care” play a crucial role in pathways toward socio-ecological transformation and gender equality. Further research in the field of time, care, and gender studies could be based on this framework and add new perspectives on research on sustainable development.
【 授权许可】
Unknown
Copyright © 2023 Smetschka, Gaube and Mader.
【 预 览 】
Files | Size | Format | View |
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RO202310102904845ZK.pdf | 330KB | download |