Publication | Closed Access
Individualist and collectivist consumer motivations in local organic food markets
83
Citations
42
References
2016
Year
Community-supported Agriculture MembersSustainable Food SystemAgricultural EconomicsConsumer ResearchSustainable DevelopmentFood ChoiceCommunity-supported Agriculture ProgramsFood MarketingCollectivist Consumer MotivationsConsumer CultureFood SystemsConsumer BehaviorPublic HealthFood JusticeFood PolicyHealth SciencesLocal Food SystemsConsumer Decision MakingRegional Food SystemsCommunity EngagementConsumerismMarketingFood SustainabilityCommunity DevelopmentLocal EconomiesCommunity-supported Agriculture ProgramFood Systems SustainabilityConsumer Attitude
Community‑Supported Agriculture programs provide direct economic engagement with local organic farms, yet it remains unclear whether members share a unified identity or pursue individualist versus collectivist motivations. The study aims to determine whether Community‑Supported Agriculture members are motivated by individualist or collectivist goals by analyzing interview narratives. The authors interviewed 58 members of a CSAs program in a large southwestern U.S. city to identify emergent motivational themes.
Community-Supported Agriculture programs have become a popular model for providing consumers with direct economic engagement with independent local organic farms. The degree to which Community-Supported Agriculture members are unified in their identity and consumer interests, however, is unclear. One possibility is that mostly individual interests including supposed nutritional benefits, superior taste, and avoidance of synthetic pesticides motivate Community-Supported Agriculture members. Another is that they are motivated more by environmental and economic concerns at the collective level. Our study engages this debate by analyzing emergent themes in consumers’ motivational narratives using interview data with 58 members of a Community-Supported Agriculture program in a large southwestern city in the United States. We find that Community-Supported Agriculture members are largely unified in their consumer orientation and pursue individualist and collectivist goals equally. In other words, Community-Supported Agriculture members are neither primarily altruistic nor egoistic consumers, but they approach their consumption as a holistic act. Specifically, they emphasize environmental issues and a commitment to sustainability through local organic consumption as a pathway to individual health. This suggests that an internally homogeneous, yet multidimensional, framework constitutes the motivational structure of local organic food consumption. We argue this framework aligns with an emerging eco-habitus exhibited in environmentally conscious market fields that translate into both collective and individual benefits.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1