Household behaviour and sustainability: from inactive to involved, and what lies in-between
Abstract
In this working paper we present the initial findings from a 2013 postal survey into green and ethical household behaviour. 457 usable questionnaires were returned from 3000 householders in a large northern city in the UK,... [ view full abstract ]
In this working paper we present the initial findings from a 2013 postal survey into green and ethical household behaviour. 457 usable questionnaires were returned from 3000 householders in a large northern city in the UK, giving a response rate of 15%. Respondents provided details about their levels of participation in green and ethical activities, their attitudes towards such behaviour, recent purchase decisions in different product categories, and information use and dissemination. Questions were derived from an earlier piece of qualitative research in which we carried out in-depth interviews with self-identified green consumers and a previous quantitative questionnaire. Our latest findings provide evidence to support varying levels of involvement in green and ethical activities, with differences in participation, attitudes, and information seeking. These differences are discussed and marketing implications identified.
Authors
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Caroline Oates
(University of Sheffield)
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Seonaidh McDonald
(Robert Gordon University)
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Jo Padmore
(University of Sheffield)
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Adekunle Oke
(Robert Gordon University)
Topic Area
Ethics and Marketing Track: Click here for the Ethics and Marketing track
Session
PT5-EM2 » Ethics and Marketing (14:30 - Tuesday, 7th July)
Paper
AoM_2015_paper_Limerick_24th_April_2015_with_authors_revised_version_2.pdf
Presentation Files
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