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Titel och upphov Designing for the circular economy
Utgivning, distribution etc. Routledge, Abingdon, Oxon : 2019
Utgivningsår
DDC klassifikationskod (Dewey Decimal Classification)
SAB klassifikationskod
Fysisk beskrivning xxviii, 395 sidor illustrationer
Term
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The circular economy describes a world in which reuse through repair, reconditioning and refurbishment is the prevailing social and economic model. The business opportunities are huge but developing product and service offerings and achieving competitive advantage means rethinking your business model from early creativity and design processes, through marketing and communication to pricing and supply. Designing for the Circular Economy highlights and explores 'state of the art' research and industrial practice, highlighting CE as a source of: new business opportunities; radical business change; disruptive innovation; social change; and new consumer attitudes.
The thirty-four chapters provide a comprehensive overview of issues related to product circularity from policy through to design and development. Chapters are designed to be easy to digest and include numerous examples. An important feature of the book is the case studies section that covers a diverse range of topics related to CE, business models and design and development in sectors ranging from construction to retail, clothing, technology and manufacturing.
Designing for the Circular Economy will inform and educate any companies seeking to move their business models towards these emerging models of sustainability; organizations already working in the circular economy can benchmark their current activities and draw inspiration from new applications and an understanding of the changing social and political context. This book will appeal to both academia and business with an interest in CE issues related to products, innovation and new business models.
About the editor p. ix About the contributors p. xi Acknowledgements p. xxv Preface p. xxvii Introduction p. 1 Circular Industrial Economy p. 12 Circular Economy innovation and design: setting the scene p. 23 Framing circularity at an organisational level p. 35 Circular Economy policy p. 44 Why Asia matters: Circular Economy in Japan, China and Taiwan p. 54 Circular businesses: benefits, approaches and challenges p. 70 Circular thinking in design: reflections over 25 years' experience p. 80 Business models for a Circular Economy p. 89 Designing Product Service Systems for a Circular Economy p. 102 Key issues when designing solutions for a Circular Economy p. 113 Laser printing and the Circular Economy: Kyocera challenges the status quo p. 123 Circularity Thinking: systems thinking for circular product and business model (re)design: identifying waste flows and redirecting them for value creation and capture p. 133 Design for product integrity in a Circular Economy p. 148 Thinking life cycle in a Circular Economy p. 157 Design for Resource Value p. 167 Circular textile design: old myths and new models p. 175 Circular Economy and design for remanufacturing p. 186 Repair cafés: potential implications for product design and development p. 200 Dislocated temporalities: valuing difference and working together p. 213 Design for a Circular Economy in Industry 4.0 p. 221 3D printing: revolutionising the way we repair things p. 232 Exploring circular design opportunities for wearable technology p. 248 Makerspaces as free experimental zones p. 260 Repair cafes: circular and social innovation p. 270 Delivering a more Circular Economy for electrical goods in retail in the UK p. 285 Accelerating the Circular Economy @ HP p. 296 iFixit: a case study in repair p. 307 Lessons learned from practice when developing a circular business model p. 316 Interface: Net-works - lessons learnt turning nets into carpet p. 326 'Who is mining the Anthropocene?' p. 336 Reversible building design p. 344 Design and the Circular Economy in the UK blinds and shutter industry p. 360 Circularity information management for buildings: the example of materials passports p. 369 Index p. 381