Meanings and Motives for Consumers’ Sustainable Actions in the Food and Clothing Domains
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Prior Literature and Theoretical Background
2.1. Sustainability Understanding
2.2. Motivation for Sustainable Actions
3. Materials and Methods
3.1. Interviewees and Recruitment
3.2. Interview Guide
3.3. Data Analysis
4. Results
4.1. Consumer Associations with the Concept of Sustainability in General
4.2. Consumer Associations with the Concept of Sustainability in Food and Clothing
4.3. Behaviours Linked to Sustainability in Food and Apparel
4.4. Motivations behind Sustainable Actions in the Apparel and Food Domains
4.4.1. Motivations that Drive Sustainable Behaviours in the Food Domain
4.4.2. Motivations that Drive Sustainable Behaviours in the Clothing Domain
4.4.3. Amotivation in Food and Clothing
5. Discussion
5.1. Implications for Future Research
5.2. Limitations
5.3. Implications for Public Policy and Marketing
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A. Interview Guide
Appendix B. Consumer Associations with Sustainability and Its Associated Importance in Consumers’ Minds
Description (Code) | Number of Persons (Sustainability Meaning/Importance) | Theme | Quote Example from Interviewees |
Resources (EN1) | 18/9 | Environment | “I get concerned when I see how much we dig out of the Earth, how many trees were cut down, how we pollute our water, it seems like it’s a never ending story about just taking stuff from nature without giving anything back and never replacing it with something good” |
Environment (EN2) | 5/3 | Environment | “The main thing that comes to mind with regards to sustainability is definitely the environment and the planet” |
Environment protection (EN3) | 15/2 | Environment | “I am just thinking about sustainable living so sustainability (is) something where you take care of the environment and your surroundings” |
Production process (EN4) | 11/2 | Environment | “avoid doing permanent damage to the soil or the water or the fish or the animal population or everything there is” or “not use too many or any chemicals” |
Carbon footprint (EN5) | 3 | Environment | “I think the first thing I think about is in terms of carbon footprint (…) and the ecosystem” |
Circular economy (EN6) | 2 | Environment | “Circular economy like the native Americans they had this nature philosophy. If you take something from Earth you have to give it back, you cannot take more than we actually have; (…) we have to find a way to give back, so future generations can also leave from that.” |
Worker wellbeing (S1) | 3 | Social | “I think when you are purchasing whatever product … as consumer you are more critical about how, or under what circumstances has this been produced and are there any children working there, or what is the environment for the workers like?” |
Human rights (S2) | 2 | Social | |
Child labour (S3) | 1 | Social | |
Political (S4) | 4/1 | Social | |
Economic growth (E1) | 1 | Economic | “I have this broad understanding of sustainability. It is also about economic and social sustainability, but I think it has its foundation in the environmental part so if we want to create a wealthy society we have to do it from a green perspective, from an environmentally-friendly perspective and the same goes for the social sustainability” |
Future generations (T1) | 9/12 | Temporal | “Passing on the Earth and the planet to the future generations so that they can also be here and have high living standards and sustain themselves.” “I also think about the word long-term as opposed to short term, I think it’s inherited in the word (i.e., sustainability).” |
Long term/long-lasting (T2) | 5 | Temporal | |
Sceptic (P1) | 2 | Personal | “Mostly is a buzz world. It is some sort of a marketing trick most of the time. Because it is so broad it can mean a lot of things and sometimes it is just used to make me buy the product.” “I eat a lot of ecological things for example so it is, I just kind of thing that is also good for the body and for that part.” |
Health (P2) | 2/3 | Personal | |
Efficiency (Th1) | 1 | Technology | “I think it is also related to human interacting with technology and technological products. That is what I meant by long term.” |
Technology (Th1) | 1 | Technology | |
Restrictive behaviours | 14 | Behaviour | “I think about [i.e., sustainability], I always bring a tote bag, I don’t use plastic bags.”; “think about your choices not to use too much meat, not to eat too much meat.” |
Purchase behaviours | 9 | Behaviour | “I also attempt to buy a bit more organic products that are made from recyclable materials”; “(…) something like for example … things are produced in the right way or maybe locally.”;”(…) buying used clothes.” |
Using to prolong life of products | 5/1 | Behaviour | “reuse old stuff don’t throw that much out, don’t buy new electronics all the time.”;“(…) if I use a lot of… you know like a plastic dish or plate and just throwing it out instead of using something that I can use again.” |
Disposal/Recycling | 10/1 | Behaviour | “(…) maybe that you recycle things for example like everyday things.”; “(…) thinking about your behaviour and not just throwing stuff that can be recycled away.” |
Solution for current problems | /6 | - | “if we want to continue living on this planet, we want to continue to live on this planet I think it’s very important to deal with environmental problems” |
Broad term | 7 | - | “it is so broad so it is difficult to say exactly what it is”; “It could be many things, it’s quite a broad term” |
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Meaning Themes | Clothing | Frequency * | Food | Frequency * |
---|---|---|---|---|
Production | material type | 17 | resources | 6 |
environmental impact | 13 | environmental impact | 9 | |
production process | 21 | production process | 11 | |
workers’ wellbeing | 17 | organic | 12 | |
animal welfare | 8 | |||
workers’ wellbeing | 4 | |||
local | 11 | |||
Use | repurposing | 3 | use leftovers | 7 |
long-lasting | 18 | |||
second-hand | 10 | |||
prolonging life of clothes | 10 | |||
Disposal | donating | 12 | reduce waste | 17 |
store’s recycling program | 3 | |||
waste of clothes/overproduction | 6 | |||
Transport | carbon footprint | 10 | carbon footprint | 11 |
Behaviour | avoid plastic wraps | 3 | avoid plastic wraps | 5 |
labelled as sustainable (as a guide) | 3 | grow own food | 2 | |
limit consumption | 3 | limit meat | 6 | |
seasonality | 2 | |||
Other | fuzzy term | 2 | taking care of own health | 9 |
search for information | 4 |
Behaviour Category | Apparel Domain | Food Domain |
---|---|---|
Purchasing | second-hand | box subscription |
labelled clothes | single pieces of fruits | |
long-lasting materials | ecological/organic | |
close to expiration (suboptimal foods) | ||
labelled products | ||
local products | ||
what is in season | ||
Restrictive | limit purchases of clothes | avoid food waste (limit amount of food bought) |
limit consumption of new clothes | limit meat consumption | |
limit wash | hold back from impulse buying | |
no softener | avoid products made of endangered species | |
eco softeners and soaps | avoid palm oil | |
avoid excess/unnecessary plastic packaging | ||
Using | repair clothes | use leftovers |
repurpose clothes | ||
share/swap clothes | ||
use clothes longer | ||
Disposal | donate clothes | recycling |
give clothes to recycling programme at store | composting | |
sell clothes | ||
Other | research before purchase | compare products before purchasing |
make own clothes | research before purchase | |
bring own bag | ||
grow own food | ||
take care of own health | ||
make shopping list | ||
learn from mistakes (food waste) | ||
have a meal plan |
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Stancu, C.M.; Grønhøj, A.; Lähteenmäki, L. Meanings and Motives for Consumers’ Sustainable Actions in the Food and Clothing Domains. Sustainability 2020, 12, 10400. https://doi.org/10.3390/su122410400
Stancu CM, Grønhøj A, Lähteenmäki L. Meanings and Motives for Consumers’ Sustainable Actions in the Food and Clothing Domains. Sustainability. 2020; 12(24):10400. https://doi.org/10.3390/su122410400
Chicago/Turabian StyleStancu, Catalin M., Alice Grønhøj, and Liisa Lähteenmäki. 2020. "Meanings and Motives for Consumers’ Sustainable Actions in the Food and Clothing Domains" Sustainability 12, no. 24: 10400. https://doi.org/10.3390/su122410400
APA StyleStancu, C. M., Grønhøj, A., & Lähteenmäki, L. (2020). Meanings and Motives for Consumers’ Sustainable Actions in the Food and Clothing Domains. Sustainability, 12(24), 10400. https://doi.org/10.3390/su122410400