Vol. 4 No. 1 (2021)
Research

Introduction to Special Collection: Social Science and the Social Life of Plastic

Brigitte Steger
University of Cambridge
Patrick O’Hare
University of St Andrews
Teresa Sandra Perez
University of Cambridge

Published 2021-05-04

Keywords

  • Post-consumer plastic,
  • household recycling,
  • circular economy,
  • plastic pollution,
  • qualitative research,
  • interdisciplinary,
  • environmental politics,
  • waste policy,
  • global social problems,
  • people-centred solutions,
  • consumption cultures
  • ...More
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How to Cite

Steger, B., O’Hare, P., & Perez, T. S. (2021). Introduction to Special Collection: Social Science and the Social Life of Plastic. Worldwide Waste, 4(1), 1. https://doi.org/10.5334/wwwj.76

Abstract

Concern around plastic pollution and China’s ban on receiving foreign waste and recyclate have refocused attention on responsible waste management and attracted interdisciplinary research that impacts policy and practice. Consequently, plastic has elevated the role of social science in the innovation space, which has traditionally been occupied by science and enterprise. This opening article marks the launch of a special collection of works, which will be published monthly, on the social life of plastic. As a preface to the forthcoming contributions, this introduction highlights the value of humanities and social science approaches to tackling plastic waste, tracing the directions that the social science of waste and plastic has taken and can take in future. Concomitantly, it helps to steer discussions and collaborations away from the restricted realm of plastic bag consumption towards a deeper engagement with socio-material processes. We thus contribute to ensuring that the current anti-plastic zeitgeist is situated in space and time, and that potential solutions benefit from a rigorous examination of the multiplicity of plastics.