ABSTRACT

This book engages with the topic of ethical consumption and applies a critical-realist approach to explore the process of becoming and being an ethical consumer. By integrating Margaret Archer’s theory of identity formation and Christian Coff’s work on food ethics, it develops a theoretical account explicating the generative mechanism that gives rise to ethical consumer practices and identities. The second part of the book presents the findings from a qualitative study with self-perceived ethical food consumers to demonstrate the fit between the proposed theoretical mechanism and the actual experiences of ethically committed consumers. Through integrating agency-focused and socio-centric perspectives on consumer behaviour, the book develops a more comprehensive and balanced approach to conceptualising and studying consumption processes and phenomena.

chapter |14 pages

Introduction

part 1|54 pages

Theorising the ethical consumer

chapter 1|24 pages

Analysing consumption

Towards an integrated approach

chapter 2|16 pages

Ethical consumption and critical realism

part 2|105 pages

Studying the ethical consumer

chapter 4|24 pages

Studying consumption

A realist approach

chapter 5|10 pages

Meeting the ethical consumers

chapter 6|21 pages

Becoming an ethical consumer

Moral concerns, emotional commentaries, and reflexive deliberations

chapter 7|31 pages

Being an ethical consumer

Exercising moral agency in the contexts of objective reality

chapter 8|17 pages

The inner self in the outer world

The social life of an ethical consumer

chapter |9 pages

Conclusion