Reuse Value: The potential of community based organisations to reframe and transform the circular economy

Stephen Healy
Ruth Lane
Melisa Duque Hurtado

Circular economy initiatives in Australia increasingly reference reuse, yet dominant recycling-led approaches continue to reproduce business-as-usual. This paper asks what kinds of worlds are made through reuse by examining Substation 33 and St Kilda Mums (now Our Village). Drawing on Karatani’s reading of surplus value, we develop “reuse value” as a parallax concept that captures both the embodied potential of discarded materials and the relational forms of care through which they re-enter circulation.

Diverse values of surplus for a community economy of fish(eries)

Emma L Sharp
Ingrid Petersen
Georgia Mclellan (Whakatōhea and Ngāi Te Rangi)
Alana Cavadino
Nicolas Lewis

This paper develops a diverse economies account of fish ‘waste’ that revalues it as ‘surplus’. We examine ‘Kai Ika’, a community marine conservation experiment in Tāmaki Makaurau (Auckland), Aotearoa New Zealand. Kai Ika rescues fish heads, frames and offal that were previously ‘going to waste’ and redistributes them to fish eaters who would otherwise struggle to access these foods. It involves fishers and community sector and Indigenous actors in an initiative that converts would-be waste into surplus.