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Título
Personal and community values behind sustainable food consumption: a meta-ethnography
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Human values
Alternative food networks
Sustainable consumption
Ethnography
Cultural capital
Qualitative research
Clasificación UNESCO
51 Antropología
5103 Antropología Social
Fecha de publicación
2023
Editor
Frontiers Media
Citación
Lamarque, M., Tomé-Martín, P., & Moro-Gutiérrez, L. (2023). Personal and community values behind sustainable food consumption: A meta-ethnography. Frontiers in Sustainable Food Systems, 7, 1292887. https://doi.org/10.3389/fsufs.2023.1292887
Resumen
[EN]Various aspects of sustainable food consumption have been studied within the
Social Sciences in the last years. Specifically, the analysis of motivations and
determinants behind alternative economic practices has gained prominence in
disciplines such as Sociology, Psychology, Economics and Marketing, seeking
to understand, measure and calculate consumers' decision-making processes
and actions through the application of cognitive theories and qualitative
predictive models. Anthropology—more specifically through the practice of
ethnography—, has also made significant contributions, mostly toward the
analysis and description of contemporary cooperative experiences, both in
rural and urban settings. However, within this field, few studies have focused
on the underlying values, as well as the symbolic, emotional/affective, and
identity-based incentives that exist behind the participation in sustainable, pro-
environmental, organic, and fair-trade food initiatives. This kind of perspective
might help in comprehending how different people or social groups
conceptualize their habits and link them to certain representations or beliefs.
At the same time, it can provide information about the way in which action-
related values appear in discourse and become embodied, whether they are
uniform, conflicting, precede practice or emerge as a post-personal reflection
of those involved. Through a review, synthesis, and analysis of qualitative
literature—meta-ethnography—this paper seeks to present an overview of
available academic work on the social, political, personal, material, and ethical
reasons associated with partaking in alternative food networks. The findings
will be analyzed and discussed in relation to a constructivist perspective, as
well as debates around identity, social distinction, and gender.
URI
DOI
10.3389/fsufs.2023.1292887
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