Lost Institutional Memory and Policy Advice: The Royal Society of Arts on the Circular Economy Through the Centuries
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- -
- Sophie Thomas, Road to Recovery. RSA Journal 2015 [1].
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2. The RSA on the Circular Economy
2.1. Key Historical Narrative and Policy Outlook in Circular Economy Theorizing
2.2. The RSA and the Circular Economy
2.3. Contradictory Historical Evidence
3. The Society of Arts on Waste Products
3.1. The Society of Arts Modus Operandi
3.2. Neglected Resources and Increased Efficiency
3.3. By-Product Development
For just as every technical process cannot be considered to be beyond improvement, there is always scope for technical investigation; but the true residual phenomena of which I would speak to-night are waste products. There is, I imagine, no manufacture in which every substance produced meets with a market. Some products are always allowed to run to waste, yet it is evident that every effort consistent with economy should be made to prevent such waste; and it has been frequently found that an attempt in this direction, though at first unsuccessful, has finally been worked into such a form as to remunerate the manufacturer([58], pp. 737–738).
3.4. Lyon Playfair (1818–1898)
The horseshoe nails, dropped in the streets during the daily traffic, are carefully collected by her, and reappear in the form of swords and guns. The clippings of the traveling tinker are mixed with the parings of horses’ hoofs from the smithy, or the cast-off woolen garments of the poorest inhabitants of a sister isle, and soon afterwards, in the form of dyes of brightest blue, grace the dress of courtly dames. The main ingredient of the ink with which I now write was possibly once part of a broken hoop of an old beer-barrel. The bones of dead animals yield the chief constituent of lucifer-matches. The dregs of port-wine, carefully rejected by the port-wine drinker in decanting his favourite beverage, are taken by him in the morning, in the form of Seidlitz powders, to remove the effects of his debauch. The offal of the streets and the washings of coal-gas reappear carefully preserved in the lady’s smelling-bottle, or are used by her to flavour blancmanges for her friends([67], pp. 165–166).
Nature uses up her waste materials by beautiful processes which we try to imitate in our hygienic measures, and produces out of them substances which become of great utility in the economy of the universe. In several of my lectures I have endeavoured to bring before you the economy of chemistry. I have shown you that it takes substances apparently repulsive, and converts them into industrial utilities. We only imitate Nature in this respect. She allows nothing to be waste in the universe, but always converts the refuse materials into substances useful to man. When you see Nature thus cherishing her waste materials, and carefully using up all effete, decaying, and putrid matter for great purposes in the economy of the universe, you will not be inclined to think that the economy of chemistry in converting waste substances into industrial utilities, is either ignoble or repulsive, or that the subject itself was unworthy of being brought before you([73], p. 84).
3.5. Peter Lund Simmonds (1814–1897)
- “On Some Undeveloped and Unappreciated Articles of Raw Produce from Different Parts of the World” (1854; Awarded a silver medal in 1855 by the Society of Arts) [78]
- “On the Utilization of Waste Substances” (1859) [85]
- “On the Useful Application of Waste Products and Undeveloped Substances” (1869) [86]
- “The Utilisation of Waste: A Quarter of a Century’s Progress” (1882) [87]
3.6. On the Society of Arts’ Popular and Professional Outreach
3.7. The RSA and Waste Recovery in the Twentieth Century
4. Achieving Economic Circularity: Spontaneous Markets or Purposeful Design?
4.1. Profits vs. Design
Industrialists may think they are working with the most up to date technology and fully optimised systems, and by some definitions they are. However, if the layers are peeled back they reveal real horrors: hazardous factories in developing countries producing our cheap clothes; mines that contaminate land while fuelling conflict; and unstable systems built on slave labour, accidental deaths. These now antiquated foundations do not work for the triple bottom line of people, planet and profit([8], p. 9).
4.2. Intermediaries vs. Extended Producer Responsibility
What do we turn up first? We have pieces of cotton and linen rags,—the raw material of the paper-maker, who transforms these unsightly objects probably into the most delicately-scented note-paper. Here, again, we have pieces of paper of all kinds—what can they be for? They form materials for making paste-board, dolls’ heads, and occasionally papier mâché. What a singular history we have here! The ball-dress of a lady drops into the rag-basket, and reappears as a billet-doux; disappears again, to reappear once more in the drawing room or the nursery, as a workbox or a doll. Returning to the basket again, we find pieces of wollen cloths of different colours,—what use can we put them to, as they do not make paper? The bits of scarlet cloth, which are dyed with cochineal, are boiled in soda to extract the colouring matter, which is used in dyeing chessmen, billiard-balls, and other things. Or we may sort the bits of cloth of different colours, and prepare from them materials for making flock-papers for rooms, or we might make roofing-felt of them([2], p. 7).
Rags from woollen materials undergo many peculiar metamorphoses; old clo’ criers first collect them; they are then successively converted into mungo, shoddy, and devil’s dust, and reappear as ladies’s superfine cloth; they then degenerate into druggets, and are finally used for the manufacture of flock paper. After undergoing all these transformations, they are used by the agriculturist as manure, on account of the large amount of nitrogen they contain. The presence of this element makes them of great use, also, to the chemical manufacturer; he boils them down with pearlash, horns and hoofs of cattle, old iron hoops, blood, chippings of leather, and broken horse-shoes, and produces the beautiful yellow and red salts known as prussiates of potash. From these, again, the rich and valuable pigment called Prussian blue is made, and thus do our old rags enter upon a fresh career of beauty and usefulness, to form, in their turn, other waste products, which may again be utilised through the power of man’s intelligence([92], pp. 105–106).
4.3. Long-Distance Trade vs. Proximity
5. Reflective Conclusions
6. Materials and Methods
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Bladder and sausage-skin dealers | 14 |
Blood driers | 2 |
Bone dealers, bone boilers and crushers | 16 |
Chimney sweepers | 180 |
Coal dust makers | 3 |
Coke makers (Gas works) | 18 |
Cork bed and cork carpet manufacturers | 4 |
Cork cutters | 50 |
Cotton waste merchants | 17 |
Esparto merchants | 8 |
Feather purifiers | 12 |
Fellmongers | 15 |
Felt makers | 16 |
Fent dealer | 1 |
Flock manufacturers | 7 |
Fuel (patent) manufacturers | 9 |
Gelatine makers | 12 |
Glue and size makers | 14 |
Glue price merchants | 5 |
Glycerine manufacturers or agents | 8 |
Gold beaters’ skin makers | 8 |
Grease manufacturers for coaches, carts, railways, axles, &c. | 32 |
Guano merchants | 17 |
Human hair merchants and manufacturers | 32 |
Horn and bone merchants | 14 |
Ivory-black and lamp-black makers | 13 |
Lint manufacturers | 10 |
Manure merchants and manufacturers | 76 |
Marine store dealers (rags, phials, and bottles, &c.) | 560 |
Melters and tallow chandlers | 46 |
Mop makers | 6 |
Naphta distillers | 21 |
Oakum manufacturers | 24 |
Oil refiners and seed crushers | 55 |
Orange peel cutters | 2 |
Plasterers’ hair manufacturers | 12 |
Rag merchants | 133 |
Rubbish carters, and road and dust contractors | 15 |
Sand and gravel merchants | 14 |
Sawdust contractors | 4 |
Scum boilers | 2 |
Ship breakers | 6 |
Shoddy manufacturer | 1 |
Soot merchants | 3 |
Tanners | 54 |
Tripe dressers | 113 |
Wardrobe dealers and old clothes’ salesmen | 337 |
Waste paper dealers | 51 |
Waste ivory, bone, and tortoiseshell dealers | 3 |
Yeast merchants | 16 |
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Desrochers, P. Lost Institutional Memory and Policy Advice: The Royal Society of Arts on the Circular Economy Through the Centuries. Recycling 2025, 10, 49. https://doi.org/10.3390/recycling10020049
Desrochers P. Lost Institutional Memory and Policy Advice: The Royal Society of Arts on the Circular Economy Through the Centuries. Recycling. 2025; 10(2):49. https://doi.org/10.3390/recycling10020049
Chicago/Turabian StyleDesrochers, Pierre. 2025. "Lost Institutional Memory and Policy Advice: The Royal Society of Arts on the Circular Economy Through the Centuries" Recycling 10, no. 2: 49. https://doi.org/10.3390/recycling10020049
APA StyleDesrochers, P. (2025). Lost Institutional Memory and Policy Advice: The Royal Society of Arts on the Circular Economy Through the Centuries. Recycling, 10(2), 49. https://doi.org/10.3390/recycling10020049