let’s put in this as the thesis conclusion for doc … 6. Conclusion
Brīvbode is best understood not as the site of a single practice but as a nexus where several practices are held in working relation. Throughout the thesis I have argued, following Schatzki (2002, 2017) and Shove, Pantzar and Watson (2012), that what happens in Brīvbode is not the performance of a stabilised practice of “freecycling” but the situated coordination of household divestment, wardrobe management, repair, craft, sorting, sociality, sufficiency, volunteering, and resale at a single small site. Freecycling, as I have used the term, names the bundle rather than a settled practice entity. This framing lets the analysis follow what actually happens — the partial overlap, exchange, and friction between recognisable practices — without forcing them into a coherence they do not have. It also makes Brīvbode legible as one of Hobson’s (2016) generative spaces: a setting whose generativity comes precisely from the proximity and recombinability of multiple practices, not from any one of them having been redesigned.
The site sustains two simultaneous circulations: of things, and of the elements of practice that travel with them. Chapter 4 followed the obvious circulation — a garment leaves one wardrobe and is enrolled in another — and the less obvious one alongside it. Competencies acquired in dressing or craft are recruited into volunteer sorting; the meaning of thrift migrates from domestic darning into modes of divestment (Shove et al. 2012: 75; Gregson 2007); leftovers from one practice become resources for another. The non-monetary, physically permanent character of the site is what makes this dual circulation possible. Materials, meanings, and competencies are unpacked and recombined at the threshold, and the swapshop’s distinctiveness lies less in any single transaction it enables than in the proximity at which it stages them.
The bundle holds together through heterogeneous, partly incompatible meanings, of which sustainability is only one — and often a quiet one. Brīvbode recruits and retains practitioners through meanings as varied as access and dignity, aesthetic autonomy, novelty and style experimentation, craft sourcing, decluttering, sociality, care for things, and the relief of routing surplus somewhere “right.” These meanings do not need to align. Some participants articulate explicit environmental motivations; many do not, locating their participation instead in generational habits of frugality, in care for specific people, or in the pleasures of finding and giving. Following Smith and Jehlička (2013), I have read this as quiet sustainability: beneficial environmental outcomes that emerge from ordinary practices not represented as environmental by their practitioners. The site’s circular character is thus an emergent property of coordinated practices rather than a shared moral project, and this is part of why it works.
Removing price does not remove work — it redistributes and transforms it. Chapter 5 argued that the absence of a monetary regime does not produce a frictionless flow of goods. It shifts the labour of valuation, sorting, curation, mediation, and disposal onto volunteers and participants, and onto the relational, ethical registers through which they take it on. Wheeler and Glucksmann’s (2015) consumption work names the structure of these tasks; the recent literature on care and circular consumption (Mesiranta et al. 2025; Tölg and Fuentes 2025), together with Bankovska’s (2020) reading of care as not always joyful, names the orientation. Brīvbode shows what consumption work looks like when neither the price signal nor the formal employment relation is available to organise it: it becomes simultaneously practical labour and ethical attention, and the boundary between them is precisely what allows it to remain largely invisible — to participants, to the public, and to circular economy policy.
This labour is gendered, unevenly distributed, and continuous with domestic consumption work. The fieldwork confirms what feminist scholarship on shopping and recycling has long established (Miller 1998; Wheeler and Glucksmann 2015): the work of circulation is consistently absorbed by women, both inside the swapshop and along the extended divestment networks that route household surplus to it. Several of the most embedded participants act as logistics nodes for neighbours, colleagues, and family — sorting, deciding, transporting on others’ behalf. The competencies this requires are transmitted, often deliberately, to daughters. Sufficiency-oriented, time-rich lives are the structural condition that makes Brīvbode possible at all, and circular economy policies that imagine more such initiatives without recognising that condition will quietly depend on its invisibility (Hobson et al. 2021).
Brīvbode is generative because it makes the contradictions of circular consumption practically workable, not because it resolves them. The swapshop is at once a route for divestment, a source of acquisition, a curatorial workplace, a meeting point, a craft supply, a threshold between use and waste, and at times a low-friction overflow channel for the very overconsumption it aspires to address. The tensions between these — exchange vs. charity, reuse vs. dumping, care vs. extraction, quiet sustainability vs. articulated environmentalism — are not eliminated. They are negotiated, situationally and relationally, by people with the time, skill, and disposition to do so. The contribution of this thesis is to show how, in a site that operates without price and without formal labour, ordinary circulation becomes both possible and demanding — and to argue that recognising the work of holding it together is a precondition for any policy that hopes to sustain such sites or scale what they do.
Limitations and openings The interview corpus skews female, reflecting the gendered organisation of the practice but limiting what can be said about men’s careers in the swapshop. The fieldwork was concentrated in one site at one moment in a rapidly changing Latvian reuse landscape; the comparative question of whether explicitly articulated sustainability makes practices more durable than quiet ones (§4.7) remains open. So does the question of how the kind of community-based care Brīvbode performs could be supported without being absorbed into formal waste infrastructure that would reorganise the very labour that makes it work.
A few notes on how I’d use this:
§1–§3 answer RQ1 PYHGNL on how freecycling is organised; §4–§5 answer RQ2 NSNSQ3 on the work and its distribution; §6 ties back to the introduction’s framing.
The existing CONCLUSION paragraphs JE7FK2 U2PZ9C FE5BCM HMDEDU read as orphaned notes; some of their phrasing is worth lifting (esp. “Brīvbode’s moral economy is negotiated, situational practice where the meaning of ‘right circulation’ is worked out in real time” — that’s a great line, I’d use it in §6).
If you want it shorter for the deadline, §1–§4 alone do the core argumentative work; §5 and §6 are the payoff but can be compressed.