CALL FOR SESSIONS AND ABSTRACTS
The Sustainable Consumption Research Action Initiative (SCORAI) invites researchers, policymakers, and practitioners to submit abstracts and session proposals for its 5th International SCORAI Global Conference (2026) on the theme “Looking Back to Move Forward: Sustainable Consumption from Rio 92 to the Post-SDGs Agenda.” The conference, to be held in São Paulo at the School of Economics, Business, Accounting and Actuarial Sciences of the University of São Paulo (FEA/USP), will provide a space for interdisciplinary dialogue on the evolution of sustainable consumption over the past decades and the pathways for the future.
Brazil is home to the 1992 and 2012 United Nations Conferences on Sustainable Development. These landmark events highlighted unsustainable consumption in industrialised nations and its global consequences, yet progress since then has been slow. While efficiency improvements have led to less resource-intensive production of goods and services, overconsumption and far-reaching extractive practices continue to drive ecological overshoot.
Today, new research allows us to quantify carbon and ecological footprints with increasing precision, revealing persistent trends: larger homes, rising material consumption, and little change in high-impact behaviours. Advertising and social media fuel consumerist lifestyles worldwide in a false belief that it will bring greater happiness and well-being. In contrast, many traditional societies demonstrate that placing high value on family, community, human interactions and shared social and cultural experiences is more effective in bringing about well-being and happiness.
This conference will take account of the areas of progress and reflect on where we are and what the key barriers to progress are. It will also consider how the ongoing changes in the global climate and international relations and conflicts might affect lifestyles in the more and the less consumerist societies. We welcome contributions to five tracks (outlined below).
We invite researchers, practitioners, and policymakers to submit abstracts and session proposals for the upcoming SCORAI conference. This is an opportunity to share your work with an international audience engaged in advancing sustainable consumption research and practice. Selected contributions will have the chance to be published in Special Issues and Collections of renowned journals.
Special Issues and Collections
We are pleased to announce that selected contributions from the conference will have the opportunity to be published in special issues of prestigious journals.
- Journal of Consumer Policy
Special Issue: Advancing Research on Sustainable Consumption - Sustainability: Science, Practice and Policy
Special Collection: Sustainable Consumption in the 21st Century: Taking Account and Driving the Future of Sustainable Consumption – From Rio 92 to a Post-SDG Agenda. It will focus on sustainability-related topics discussed at the conference.
We are also in discussions for an additional special issue. More details will be shared soon.
Stay tuned for submission guidelines and deadlines!
All submissions are due in PDF format (maximum file size: 8 MB) and should be done online no later than 15 September 2025 (16:00 CET)
Different kinds of submission formats are possible. For each format, there are specific guidelines describing how to prepare and submit the required materials.
Conference topics
- Lifestyles transformations – Behavioral change and system change, agency, interventions, lock-ins and barriers to transformation. We especially welcome the perspectives from communities that already practice sustainable lifestyles under different names, such as thrift, simplicity, communalism and others.
- Society and Culture – Transforming values and norms of consumer society; Learning from traditional societies – can they provide cultural and social models for good life? Can they attain higher standards of living without becoming dependent on mass consumption?
- Policy, Governance and Choice Architecture – Existing and new frameworks; Opportunities for and limits to government interventions.
- Emerging Economic Paradigms – From development approaches towards a post-SDG agenda; Prospects for a post-growth economy in a competitive world; Impacts of nationalism and wars on national economies and lifestyles.
- Education and Learning – Contribution of educational institutions to lifestyle choices and consumption practices in people’s lives; How can non-consumerist values be taught?
Looking back to move forward: sustainable consumption from Rio 92 to a post SDGs agenda
Call for sessions and abstracts
The Fifth International Conference of Sustainable Consumption Research and Action Initiative, SCORAI Global, will take place in Sao Paulo, Brazil, the country that hosted the first United Nations Conference on Sustainable Development (UNCSD) in 1992 and its third rendition in 2012. The 1992 conference was the first to call attention to unsustainable consumption levels in the industrialized countries and their impacts on the countries of the Global South and the world ecological system. Its landmark report “Agenda 21” called for addressing this major barrier to sustainable development; but little follow-up was achieved.
In 2012, at the 3rd UNCSD conference, again in Rio, the Sustainable Development Goals were launched, an ambitious attempt to address environmental degradation, poverty and inequality across the 193 member states. Also at this conference the 10 Year Framework for Sustainable Production and Consumption (10YFP) was launched.
Today, nearly fifteen years later, some progress has been made toward the objectives of the SDGs, but little has been achieved toward the objectives of the 10YFP, and overconsumption is rampant. While the deployment of renewable energy and efficiency technologies have increased exponentially, they are barely keeping up with the increasing global demand for energy and minerals, much less reversing the ecological overshoot beyond the planetary boundaries. For SDG 12, Responsible Consumption and Production, 60% of the targets are in stagnation or regression.
It is now possible to quantify carbon and ecological footprints from consumption and lifestyles with ever-increasing precision, owing to new research and methods development. These studies allow scientists to estimate the necessary reductions in the overconsuming parts of the world as well as plan the development paths in the underconsuming regions. The results show that nothing has fundamentally changed at the household or at the macro levels in the Global North. Dwellings are still getting bigger, purchases of material stuff are soaring, and flying and eating red meat show few signs of abating. Advertising and social media promote these lifestyles across the world, crowding out local solutions and luring people toward overconsumption with promises of a lush material lifestyle. At the same time, citizens in the Global South countries are increasing their carbon footprint in tandem with their growing economies.
This conference will explore approaches to the transition toward a non-consumerist economy and social life. This includes an exploration of ways to reduce inequality in economic and political power and in opportunity, including social movement and policy interventions; generational engagements in shifting the social norms and ways of life; the role of community in dominant lifestyles; and reducing concentration of wealth, which contributes to consumerist lifestyles and political apathy.
Other topics for exploration at the conference may include: critical assessment of small-scale initiatives to adopt different lifestyles and policies, and their potential for scaling up and out; alternative cultural norms; changes in institutions and policies, and political and economic barriers to change. We especially welcome the perspectives from communities that already practice sustainable lifestyles under different names, such as thrift, simplicity, communalism and many others.
This conference will be held in Brazil, a country of deep inequalities and which, despite undergoing major political and economic upheavals, belongs to the BRICS group challenging the hegemony of the US-led global economic order. Being in Brazil will give the participants the opportunity to meet local initiatives and activists in a different historical and cultural context, including community values and pace of life. It will enable us to strengthen bonds globally, to get inspiration and opportunities for new types of research and actions, and to rethink our frames of reference.
The conference will be held from 8th to 10th of June 2026 at the University of Sao Paulo. The deadline for paper abstracts and session proposals is September 15. We welcome academic research, reports on successful experiments and actions, and interactive sessions to explore specific issues.
The conference allows for two types of presentations:
1) oral presentation
2) posters
Oral presentation in paper sessions
Conference abstract sessions will be organised by topics. Each session will contain 4-5 oral presentations and a panel discussion of all speakers.
Required information:
- Author(s) and affiliation(s)
- Title
- Extended abstract (problem definition, method, results, and significance for the advancement of sustainable consumption), max. 2000 words
- The presenting author must indicate if they will be onsite or online.
- Presenting authors for an accepted oral session presentation (onsite or online) must register and pay for their conference attendance no later than March 31, 2026, to keep their slot. Late payment might result in their oral presentation slot being converted into a poster presentation or canceled.
- Authors must pick one conference topic to which their paper should be attributed.
Poster
One poster session will be scheduled during the conference. Authors can choose to submit their abstract for this session. In addition, abstracts submitted for oral presentations can be accepted as poster presentations instead, depending on space limitations for oral presentations in the program.
Poster authors are responsible for producing their posters. At least one author for a poster presentation must be onsite for the conference.
Required information:
- Author(s) and affiliation(s)
- Title
- Extended abstract (problem definition, method, results, significance for the advancement of sustainable consumption), max. 2000 words
- Presenting author must be onsite
All session proposals and individual abstracts will be reviewed by the Scientific Committee using the following criteria:
Originality/Novelty: contribution to existing knowledge or novelty of knowledge application/utilization
Relevance/Focus: contribution to the conference theme and sustainable consumption and production research
Quality/Comprehensibility: clarity of inquiry approach and findings/conclusions derived
To submit you contribution go to the following link: https://scorai.submissao.com.br
You will be asked to fill in your name with your email address. You will receive an email with a specific link to your author account. In your author account you can submit new contributions and see all contributions you submitted. Please save/bookmark the link to your account as this will facilitate its access.
EXTENDED ABSTRACTS should include information on the following aspects: (a) Title; (b) Problem statement, research questions/aim, theoretical approach, methods/inquiry approach, findings, conclusions, and significance for the advancement of sustainable consumption; (c) References can, but do not have to, be included.
The extended abstract should be no longer than 2000 words.
During the submission, you will be asked to indicate if you wish to submit a full paper to one of the special issues or collections organised for the conference. Please note that each special issue or collection has specific deadlines for full paper submissions, which vary around 2-3 months after the conference.
Abstracts must be submitted through https://scorai.submissao.com.br
SESSION PROPOSALS should be 1000-2000 words long and propose a coherent-themed session lasting 90 minutes. Each proposal should speak to (a) what topic/question the session is focused on, (b) why it is relevant for the conference themes, and (c) what the specific perspectives are that the session is conveying. Special sessions can be based on academic research (submission of abstracts, as discussed below) or could be a dialogue session for which presenters do not submit abstracts in advance).
A full line-up of individual speakers and discussant(s) should be included in the session proposal. The academic research presentations of each speaker and discussant lined up for the session do not need to be included in the session proposal, but the speakers and discussant(s) need to submit an abstract separately indicating it is part of an academic session alongside the name of the session. This can be done via the submission system. In the case of a dialogue session, speakers and discussant(s) do not need to submit an abstract separately.