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This section discusses 13 opportunities for SCP 3.3 Transition to SCP is a Socio-technical Regime Shift Requiring Successive Changes in Social Practices, Technology Use in Daily Life and Associated Infrastructure CP patterns are framed by and embedded in existing regimes, and infrastructure, such as logistics and energy provision systems, and maintained/updated by the accumulation of daily practices of people and organizations (Spaargaren, 2011; Shove, 2016; Spurling et al., 2013). Raising the awareness of consumers can sometimes influence their behavior for the time being; however, behavioral changes will not take root unless they are associated with changes in the wider contexts of their day-to-day living, including moving, eating, caring for family, working, learning, resting and so on. it waste, water and energy are exchanged and utilized, between industries in as efficient a way as in natural systems. such as taxation is necessary Therefore, energy-saving initiatives Policy Development for Sustainable Consumption and Production in Asia Fig. 4 Five types of linkages between consumption and production. and education, transform our socio-technical regimes/systems in such ways as has been attempted repeatedly in the transition research field (Köhler et al., 2019). This includes changing social mechanisms and modes of technology use to create and provide services and new infrastructure and institutional settings. The recent Cebu declaration (APRSCP, 2021) also paid much attention to this approach in the Asian context, referring to two courses of action: 1) innovative transition through green future development and 2) systematic transformation through a green development agenda. Examples include mobility and energy; resource- workplaces; and community-based for reducing; reusing and recycling; and others. to practices in to build capacity based on the strategic considerations raised above. In According to the results of a questionnaire survey (Tsurumi et al., 2020a), material consumption increases subjective well-being to a certain level, while relational (non-material) consumption continues to increase the level of subjective well-being as consumption increases. That is, intangible experiential consumption plays an important role for our subjective well-being in an affluent society, which Asian emerging countries are becoming. It also widens opportunities for a sharing economy, the long term, experiential or partnership intangible consumption is even more important in pursuing people’s happiness. CP patterns that contain both tangible and intangible elements create well-being. 7 3.4 Bottom-up Approaches are Necessary for Enhancing Effectiveness and Acceptance of SCP Policies across the Region. The above-mentioned SCP courses need to be triggered by local- and community-level initiatives in addition to national/international-level agenda setting. However, there exist huge gaps between international/ national agendas (long-term and mid-term goals) and local concerns. Actions therefore need to be incubated in “arenas” where multi-stakeholder is formulated and various buds of co-creation grow in collaboration beyond the boundaries of the conventional stakeholders, as opposed to simply upscaling successful initiatives, to enhance the effectiveness and acceptance of SCP policies. 4.1 Opportunity 1: Experience Matters 4. Emerging Opportunities for SCP

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