1. Social Structures and Economic Conduct: Interpreting Variations in Household Energy Consumption.
- Author
-
Hackett, Bruce and Lutzenhiser, Loren
- Subjects
ENERGY consumption ,NATURAL resources ,SOCIAL status ,SOCIAL problems ,SOCIAL history - Abstract
The consumption of natural resources is rapidly emerging as a major social problem, and social efforts to control this consumption are guided in part by research that tries to specify the meaning of resources to consumers. This paper compares a sociological perspective with the more widespread economic model of consumption, using data from study of billing systems, sociocultural status, and household energy use in a California apartment complex. The research suggests that the role of marginal price in ordering consumption can be interpreted as a contingent feature of the socially structured relationship between consumption and social status. It also suggests that the utility of a technology is a secondary and emergent product of its use, a fact obscured by the conventional analytic separation of supply and demand or meansand ends. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1991
- Full Text
- View/download PDF