Patterns of practice: a reflection on the development of quantitative methodologies reflecting everyday life related to water demand and consumption in the United Kingdom
Patterns of practice: a reflection on the development of quantitative methodologies reflecting everyday life related to water demand and consumption in the United Kingdom
There is a growing body of research arguing the relevance of practice approaches to understand resource consumption, and to highlight alternative pathways to sustainability. These practice approaches offer an alternative conceptualisation of demand and have been demonstrated largely by qualitative research, particularly in the work on water and energy consumption in the home. However, these historical narratives and qualitative research have not, to date, lead to the development of quantitative or mixed methodologies that could potentially reflect the diversity of performances of practice across populations in a more systematic way. This paper reflects, critically, on one such attempt to scale a practice based perspective into a quantitative survey on water consumption and practice in homes in the south and south east of England. The use of quantitative and mixed methodology has substantial potential – from translating practice based research to policy; developing indictors to track patterns of practices as they change over time; and the exploration of methodologies that reflect the bundling and coordination of practices associated with water use inside and outside the home. The benefits and utility of such a methodological approach are highlighted, as are cautions and future research directions.
Browne, A.
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Pullinger, M.
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Medd, W.
e17b4ed2-21b9-4f59-b7cc-c93858da6906
Anderson, B.
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1 January 2014
Browne, A.
81f76a6f-6615-4d37-b47a-449c9b0caa08
Pullinger, M.
a24fedd0-8528-458b-9799-daea8521677c
Medd, W.
e17b4ed2-21b9-4f59-b7cc-c93858da6906
Anderson, B.
01e98bbd-b402-48b0-b83e-142341a39b2d
Browne, A., Pullinger, M., Medd, W. and Anderson, B.
(2014)
Patterns of practice: a reflection on the development of quantitative methodologies reflecting everyday life related to water demand and consumption in the United Kingdom.
International Journal of Social Research Methodology, 17 (1).
(doi:10.1080/13645579.2014.854012).
Abstract
There is a growing body of research arguing the relevance of practice approaches to understand resource consumption, and to highlight alternative pathways to sustainability. These practice approaches offer an alternative conceptualisation of demand and have been demonstrated largely by qualitative research, particularly in the work on water and energy consumption in the home. However, these historical narratives and qualitative research have not, to date, lead to the development of quantitative or mixed methodologies that could potentially reflect the diversity of performances of practice across populations in a more systematic way. This paper reflects, critically, on one such attempt to scale a practice based perspective into a quantitative survey on water consumption and practice in homes in the south and south east of England. The use of quantitative and mixed methodology has substantial potential – from translating practice based research to policy; developing indictors to track patterns of practices as they change over time; and the exploration of methodologies that reflect the bundling and coordination of practices associated with water use inside and outside the home. The benefits and utility of such a methodological approach are highlighted, as are cautions and future research directions.
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Pullinger et al (2013) New directions - AQUA - revised, final, submitted.pdf
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Published date: 1 January 2014
Organisations:
Energy & Climate Change Group
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Local EPrints ID: 355500
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/355500
ISSN: 1364-5579
PURE UUID: 3c9faa09-3bd1-4ca0-8a19-fcd2ff457a9d
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Date deposited: 02 Sep 2013 09:19
Last modified: 23 Jul 2022 02:06
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Author:
A. Browne
Author:
M. Pullinger
Author:
W. Medd
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