More on Voluntary Simplicity
shoegal2183 said:

Yay for fair trade
My only complaint about Fair Trade shops is that they are all pretty much the same and have the same types of things. I went to one in Amsterdam that had pretty much the same stuff as the one I go to in Cleveland.
www.tenthousandvillages.com is another site
that's globalisation for you! I guess its not as bad as people buying the same Gap shirt all over the world . . . .
There are good things (a global infrastructure and market for fairtrade stuff) and bad things (maybe these shops should sell more stuff made sustainably and locally).
Anyway, I found more on voluntary simplicity in a paper from a workshop I went to . . . .
Sustainable Consumption, Lifestyles and ‘Responsible Consumers’
Anne Marchand and Stuart Walker
PhD Student and Professor/ Associate Dean and University of Calgary, Faculty of Environmental Design
Voluntary Simplicity (or simple living), which might be considered a
movement, is an attempt to achieve a better quality of life by minimizing the detrimental
impacts of our ways of living on both the human and natural environments. Inspired by ecofeminism,
Buddhism, Taoism, and authors in the tradition of Thoreau, it “[…] represents one outcome of the
culture of cynicism that has grown up in response to a materialist culture that emphasizes superficial
meanings” (Murray, 2002).
According to Burch (2003), the main characteristics of Voluntary
Simplicity (VS) include:
• the rejection of a culture of consumption;
• a search for autonomy based on a social conscience;
• the revision of consumption choices and a preference for more
ecological modes;
• taking a conscious approach to life rather than adopting impulsive
and unconscious behaviour;
• consciousness of a spiritual life.
For instance, as Craig-Lees and Hill (2002) wrote, voluntary simplicity
lifestyles “[…] can include city dwellers who make an effort to curb their
consumption, executives who refuse a promotion (and the associated
increased income) in order to spend more time with family and friends, or
people who move to rural areas in an attempt to adopt a totally self-sufficient life-style”.
Duane Elgin, author of Voluntary Simplicity (1981), from which the
movement took its name, and Arnold Mitchell have described voluntary
simplicity by suggesting what it is not (Elgin, Mitchell, 2003). They
emphasise that VS in not a social movement confined to the United States
and that it should neither be equated with a back-to-nature movement nor
with poverty. Elgin and Mitchell add that although VS surely traces some of
its contemporary heritage from the counterculture movement of the 1960s,
its present constituency is certainly not limited to that group.
With regard to sustainability, Shaw and Newholm (2002) assert that the
ethical, social and environmental values promoted by voluntary simplicity
represent one possible path towards sustainable consumption patterns and
lifestyles. Other authors such as Reisch & Scherhorn (1999), De Graaf et al.
(2001), Maniates (2002) and Etzioni (2003) see in the VS philosophy a
direct response to consumer culture and a movement that holds lessons for a more viable, sustainable society.
Available
http://www.score-network.org/files//548_Proceedings_SCORE_WS1_20060428.pdf
In the paper, they go on to discuss how this has now become a marketing hook, where a product is sold on the values of VS.