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Title Designed to break: planned obsolescence as corporate environmental crime
ID_Doc 27031
Authors Bisschop, L; Hendlin, Y; Jaspers, J
Title Designed to break: planned obsolescence as corporate environmental crime
Year 2022
Published Crime Law And Social Change, 78, 3
DOI 10.1007/s10611-022-10023-4
Abstract Planned obsolescence is the practice of deliberately designing products to limit their life span to encourage replacement. It is a common business strategy for consumer goods, with far-reaching ecological and social consequences. Here, we examine the definition, causes and consequences of planned obsolescence by using insights from corporate crime literature, integrated with environmental philosophy, management sciences, technology studies and law. Focusing on cases of planned obsolescence in consumer electronics, we show that the concept and procedure carries conceptual ambiguity and moral ambivalence, bearing diffuse harms, benefitting short-term corporate profit but undermining consumer confidence, and posing a major barrier to environmental sustainability. We discuss the system lock-ins driving companies to engage in planned obsolescence, and reframe the practice as a form of corporate environmental crime.
Author Keywords White-collar crime; Electronic waste; Planned obsolescence; Circular economy; Corporate crime; Environmental crime
Index Keywords Index Keywords
Document Type Other
Open Access Open Access
Source Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
EID WOS:000777228900001
WoS Category Criminology & Penology; Social Sciences, Interdisciplinary
Research Area Criminology & Penology; Social Sciences - Other Topics
PDF https://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1007/s10611-022-10023-4.pdf
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