Human-in-the-circular-loop (HITCL): A human-centric approach in circular economy ecosystems research

Authors: Vayona, A., Hartwell, H., Britton, R. and Gillingham, P.

Journal: Proceedings - 2024 20th International Conference on Distributed Computing in Smart Systems and the Internet of Things, DCOSS-IoT 2024

Pages: 653-660

DOI: 10.1109/DCOSS-IoT61029.2024.00102

Abstract:

This paper introduces the Human-in-the-circular-loop (HITCL) framework, which aims to systematise the role of humans within circular economy ecosystems. The framework integrates established theories from a range of disciplines, such as psychology and human resource management, to provide an understanding of the human factors influencing the adoption of circular practices. Acknowledging the important part that humans play as both consumers and employees in shifting to a Circular Economy, the HITCL framework provides the lens under which we can study how individuals embrace the circular economy concept and how this influences their behaviours and decision-making when it comes to circular practices.

https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/40346/

Source: Scopus

Human-in-the-circular-loop (HITCL): A human-centric approach in circular economy ecosystems research

Authors: Vayona, A., Hartwell, H., Britton, R. and Gillingham, P.

Journal: 2024 20TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON DISTRIBUTED COMPUTING IN SMART SYSTEMS AND THE INTERNET OF THINGS, DCOSS-IOT 2024

Pages: 653-660

ISBN: 979-8-3503-6945-8

ISSN: 2325-2936

DOI: 10.1109/DCOSS-IoT61029.2024.00102

https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/40346/

Source: Web of Science (Lite)

Human-in-the-circular-loop (HITCL): A human-centric approach in circular economy ecosystems research

Authors: Vayona, A., Hartwell, H., Britton, R.J. and Gillingham, P.K.

Conference: 20th International Conference on Distributed Computing in Smart Systems and the Internet of Things, DCOSS-IoT 2024

Pages: 653-660

ISBN: 979-8-3503-6944-1

ISSN: 2325-2944

Abstract:

This paper introduces the Human-in-the-circular-loop (HITCL) framework, which aims to systematise the role of humans within circular economy ecosystems. The framework integrates established theories from a range of disciplines, such as psychology and human resource management, to provide an understanding of the human factors influencing the adoption of circular practices. Acknowledging the important part that humans play as both consumers and employees in shifting to a Circular Economy, the HITCL framework provides the lens under which we can study how individuals embrace the circular economy concept and how this influences their behaviours and decision-making when it comes to circular practices.

https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/40346/

https://dcoss.org/dcoss24/

Source: BURO EPrints