Results for 'Consumer society'

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  1.  14
    Subject Index accuracy, 97-101 action theory, 21n A IBS code, 123 analytic philosophy, 119.Consumer Product Safety Act - 2005 - In Wenceslao J. González (ed.), Science, Technology and Society: A Philosophical Perspective. Netbiblo. pp. 207.
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  2.  11
    Consumer society: Its definitions and its Christian criticism.Piotr Kopiec - 2020 - HTS Theological Studies 76 (3):8.
    Except for some economists, who think about the consumer society as a way to the political stability and economic progress, the philosophical and sociological view on consumptionism and consumer society is predominantly pejorative. Depending on their axiological starting points, theorists of consumptionism stress its destroying forces for societies, like social idleness, an implosion of social institutions, deepening of social divisions and social exclusion and, last but not least, ecocide. Criticism of the consumer society is (...)
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  3.  5
    Memorial Museum in Consumer Society: regarding the pleasure of consuming memorial museum. 차지민 - 2019 - Journal of the Society of Philosophical Studies 127:289-311.
    박물관은 지금까지 주로 과거를 저장하고 전시하는 수동적인 공간으로 인식되어왔다. 따라서 박물관을 현재 그리고 미래와의 연관성 안에서 이해하는 연구는 부족한 실정이다. 특히, 박물관, 그 중에서도 추모 박물관들이 다수 존재함에도 불구하고, “두 번 다시는(Never Again)”의 메시지는 박물관 공간 안에서만 공허하게 울릴 뿐 전시된 과거의 끔찍했던 인권탄압은 전 세계적으로 반복되고 있다. 본 연구는 바로 이러한 추모 박물관의 과거와 현재 사이에 부재하는 연결고리에 집중하여 현대사회에서 박물관이 어떻게 소비되고 있는지 논의하고, 이를 통해 박물관 분석에 관한 새로운 접근방식을 모색하고자 한다.BR과거를 전시하는 박물관을 현재에 위치시키기 위해 본 (...)
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  4.  33
    Crisis of the Consumer Society.Dmytro Bushuyev - 2008 - Proceedings of the Xxii World Congress of Philosophy 18:5-11.
    The paper “Crisis of the consumer society: searching for a new ideology” studies the ideology of the consumer society and its main tendencies such as values substitution, human self-isolation and loneliness and the dehumanization of the world. Based on the analysis of contemporary mass art and advertisements the author traces the growing gap between the real life of people and the dominating consumerist model of society. The author evaluates different radical movements (nationalist, racial, religious) as (...)
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  5.  3
    Inability of the Consumer Society and the Recovery of Reflective Life - Philosophical Reflection on Capitalism and Consumerism -. 이충한 - 2022 - Journal of the New Korean Philosophical Association 107:349-379.
    소비사회가 이 세계에 일으키는 근본적인 문제는 사유의 무능이다. 여기에서 사유의 무능이란 소비행위가 가져오는 쾌락에 휩싸여 삶에 대한 성찰을 제대로 수행하지 못하는 사태를 말한다. 이러한 사유의 무능은 오늘날 우리가 직면한 문제들을 해결해 나갈 수 있는 능력 몇 가지를 약화시킨다. 첫째는 관계적 무능이다. 사유의 무능은 타인에 대한 이해와 공감 능력을 약화시킨다. 소비를 통한 감각적 쾌락이 삶의 목적이 되면서 개인은 자신의 이익과 행복을 중심으로 움직이게 된다. 자신의 행동을 타인의 입장에서 생각하지 못하고 타인을 소통의 대상이 아닌 단순히 쾌락 경쟁과 경제적 가치 증식의 대상으로 바라봄으로써 (...)
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  6.  18
    Educational Rationality and Consumer Society.Ángel Gómez - 2022 - Dialogue and Universalism 32 (2):159-174.
    In the paper we analyze the educational rationality closely associated with a neoliberal cultural logic that causes various lifestyles which seek only the satisfaction of unreal or symbolic needs where the ideal of education appears as one more among others. Furthermore, we consider educational policies subordinated to an expansive cultural logic of post-industrial capitalism, having as a historical reference the neoliberal turn of the Peruvian educational policy and a symbolic structure deeply established in the psyche of the society transformed (...)
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  7. Postmodernism and Consumer Society.Hal Foster - 1983 - In The Anti-aesthetic: essays on postmodern culture. Port Townsend, Wash.: Bay Press. pp. 111--125.
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  8.  52
    Changing psychologies in the transition from industrial society to consumer society.Svend Brinkmann - 2008 - History of the Human Sciences 21 (2):85-110.
    Psychologists have traditionally been reluctant to investigate not just the historical nature of their subject matter — humans as acting, thinking and feeling beings — but even more so the historical nature of their discipline, its theories and practices. In this article, I will try to take seriously the historical transformation in the West from industrial society to consumer society. After having introduced these socio-economic designations, I shall try to illustrate how the transformation relates to changes in (...)
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  9. Spare time: consumer society’s challenges and the issues of modernizing higher education.Denis Kadochnikov - 2019 - Sotsium I Vlast 6:28-38.
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  10.  25
    Toward a Critique of Consumer Society.Gunzelin Schmid Noerr - 2001 - Constellations 8 (1):136-143.
  11.  21
    The Inner Tensions of Legal Culture in Consumer Society.Vytautas Šlapkauskas - 2010 - Jurisprudencija: Mokslo darbu žurnalas 122 (4):371-385.
    The present article explores the inner tensions of the legal culture in consumer society as a consequence of the interaction between democracy, liberalism and market economy under globalization. The interaction between democracy and modern political thought has given rise to liberal democratic society, moral and religious pluralism, and modern law. The interplay between liberal democracy and the market (“new liberalism”) has generated the idea of “instrumental reason”, whose penetration into many realms of life has transformed the structure (...)
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  12.  13
    Technique and Technology: the Dilemma of the Rational Subject in a Consumer Society.Francisco Luis Giraldo Gutiérrez - 2012 - Estudios de Filosofía (Universidad de Antioquia) 46:25-39.
    Hoy nos movemos en un mundo altamente cambiante y atestado de desarrollo científico, técnico y tecnológico. Un mundo condicionado por los intereses de una globalización económica, donde el imperativo es consumir, y donde aquellos que producen de manera individual y distinta son absorbidos, en el mejor de los casos, o anulados por el sistema capitalista. Ahora bien, ese estado de cosas ha puesto en riesgo de pérdida al sujeto racional heredado y caracterizado desde la modernidad y que es requerido hoy (...)
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  13.  95
    Reducing Meat Consumption in Today’s Consumer Society: Questioning the Citizen-Consumer Gap. [REVIEW]Erik de Bakker & Hans Dagevos - 2012 - Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 25 (6):877-894.
    Abstract Our growing demand for meat and dairy food products is unsustainable. It is hard to imagine that this global issue can be solved solely by more efficient technologies. Lowering our meat consumption seems inescapable. Yet, the question is whether modern consumers can be considered as reliable allies to achieve this shift in meat consumption pattern. Is there not a yawning gap between our responsible intentions as citizens and our hedonic desires as consumers? We will argue that consumers can and (...)
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  14.  96
    Neo-Confucian Body Techniques: Women's Bodies in Korea's Consumer Society.Taeyon Kim - 2003 - Body and Society 9 (2):97-113.
    This article examines women's bodies in South Korea and the modes of Neo-Confucian governmentality at work within this consumer society. The concealed woman's body under Neo-Confucianism appears to have been supplanted by a liberated consumer body. This seems to represent a major shift in what the body means today. Nonetheless, the techniques of governmentality that controlled women's bodies under strict Neo-Confucian codes remain active in Korea's consumer society, so that despite the appearance of a striking (...)
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  15.  24
    Identifying Consumption: Subjects and Objects in Consumer Society.Robert G. Dunn - 2008 - Temple University Press.
    Identifying Consumption illustrates how an individual’s buying habits are shaped by the dynamics of the consumer marketplace—and thus how consumption and identity inform each other. Robert Dunn brings together the various theories of spending and develops a mode of analysis concentrating on the individual subjectivity of consumption. By doing so, he addresses how we spend and its relationship with status and lifestyle. Dunn provides a comprehensive guide to the study of modern consumer behavior before summarizing and critiquing the (...)
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  16.  66
    A path of interpreting the “consumer society”: The perspective of Karl Marx and its significance. [REVIEW]Zhengdong Tang - 2008 - Frontiers of Philosophy in China 3 (2):282-293.
    When Western Marxist sociologists, such as Jean Buadrillard, constructed their critical theory of consumer society, they took the consumer society as an objective fact and methodologically restricted themselves to the non-historical method of sociology, making them unable to grasp the correct meaning of Karl Marx's historical materialist methodology. Thus, they were unable to adequately critique and transcend consumer society. After spending the early 1850s building a theoretical foundation, Marx pointed out in 1857–1858 Economical Manuscript (...)
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  17.  29
    Critical Theory, Commodities and the Consumer Society.Douglas Kellner - 1983 - Theory, Culture and Society 1 (3):66-83.
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  18.  12
    The Currency of Justice: Fines and Damages in Consumer Societies.Pat O'Malley - 2009 - Routledge-Cavendish.
    Fines and monetary damages account for the majority of legal sanctions across the whole spectrum of legal governance. Money is, in key respects, the primary tool law has to achieve compliance. Yet money has largely been ignored by social analyses of law, and especially by social theory. _The Currency of Justice_ examines the differing rationalities, aims and assumptions built into money’s deployment in diverse legal fields and sanctions. This raises major questions about the extent to which money appears as an (...)
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  19.  10
    Dialectics of Education: Adorno on the Possibility of Bildung in Consumer Society.Douglas Yacek - 2016 - Philosophy of Education 72:204-213.
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  20.  25
    Augustine’s Theology as a Solution to the Problem of Identity in Consumer Society.Burt Fulmer - 2006 - Augustinian Studies 37 (1):111-129.
  21.  9
    The Hollowed Men: Reflections of the Sixties Consumer Society.Morgan Sander - 2012 - Emergence: A Journal of Undergraduate Literary Criticism and Creative Research 3.
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  22.  3
    Hou xian dai dian ying: hou xian dai xiao fei she hui de wen hua qi guan = Postmodern cinema: a cultural spectacle of the consumer society.Jianyuan Li - 2009 - Chengdu: Sichuan ren min chu ban she.
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  23.  96
    Hannah Arendt & Jean Baudrillard: Pedagogy in the Consumer Society[REVIEW]Trevor Norris - 2006 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 25 (6):457-477.
    This paper considers the place of education within our “consumers’ society”, beginning with Hannah Arendt’s account of the rise of consumerism to a position of political dominance and the resulting eclipse of public life. Connections are then made between Arendt’s account of this rise and Jean Baudrillard’s account of the postmodern proliferation of signs and the transformation of the sign into a commodity. This radical “semiurgy” accelerates into a self-referential series of signs which entails the loss of reality – (...)
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  24.  28
    Decadence and Objectivity: Ideals for Work in the Post-consumer Society Lawrence Haworth Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1977. Pp. xi, 169. $8.50. [REVIEW]Calvin G. Normore - 1983 - Dialogue 22 (4):743-748.
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  25.  18
    Consumers’ perception of CSR motives in a post‐socialist society: The case of Serbia.Andrea Vuković, Ljiljana Miletić, Radmila Čurčić & Milica Ničić - 2020 - Business Ethics: A European Review 29 (3):528-543.
    Business Ethics: A European Review, EarlyView.
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  26. Consuming Russia: Popular Culture, Sex, and Society Since Gorbachev. Edited by Adele Marie Barker.L. Rudova - 2003 - The European Legacy 8 (1):124-124.
     
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  27.  44
    Japanese Civil Society in the Age of Deregulation: The Case of Consumers.Patricia L. Maclachlan - 2002 - Japanese Journal of Political Science 3 (2):217-242.
    Although scholars have long been interested in the relationships among civil society, the state and the market in advanced industrial democracies, the implications of state disengagement from the affairs of private firms for civil society have yet to be explored in the contemporary literature. My purpose in this essay has been to address this issue by examining the effects of deregulation on Japanese consumer society, paying particular attention to how legislative and bureaucratic changes in the wake (...)
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  28.  48
    Surveillance in ubiquitous network societies: normative conflicts related to the consumer in-store supermarket experience in the context of the Internet of Things.Jenifer Sunrise Winter - 2014 - Ethics and Information Technology 16 (1):27-41.
    The Internet of Things (IoT) is an emerging global infrastructure that employs wireless sensors to collect, store, and exchange data. Increasingly, applications for marketing and advertising have been articulated as a means to enhance the consumer shopping experience, in addition to improving efficiency. However, privacy advocates have challenged the mass aggregation of personally-identifiable information in databases and geotracking, the use of location-based services to identify one’s precise location over time. This paper employs the framework of contextual integrity related to (...)
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  29.  2
    Resisting Restless Protestant Religious Consumers in the Korean Burnout Society: Examining Korean Protestantism’s Rising Interest in Apophatic and Desert Spirituality.Euiwan Cho - 2020 - Journal of Spiritual Formation and Soul Care 13 (1):22-38.
    Why have Korean Protestants been enthusiastic for Henri Nouwen, Thomas Merton, and Orthodox books in recent years? This article proposes that apophatic spirituality and desert asceticism, influential in both Catholic and Eastern Orthodox traditions, can help assuage the thirst of Korean Protestants exhausted by the excesses of positivity and the exploitation of self. I focus on the insatiable consuming passions of Korean Protestant religious consumerism as symptoms of the burnout society. I then explore the major contribution of apophatic spirituality (...)
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  30. Tainted Food and the Icarus Complex: Psychoanalysing Consumer Discontent from Oyster Middens to Oryx and Crake.Hub Zwart - 2015 - Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 28 (2):255-275.
    In hyper-modern society, food has become a source of endemic discontent. Many food products are seen as ‘tainted’; literally, figuratively or both. A psychoanalytic approach, I will argue, may help us to come to terms with our alimentary predicaments. What I envision is a ‘depth ethics’ focusing on some of the latent tensions, conflicts and ambiguities at work in the current food debate. First, I will outline some promising leads provided by two prominent psychoanalytic authors, namely Sigmund Freud and (...)
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  31.  51
    Measuring consumers' ethical position in austria, Britain, brunei, Hong Kong, and USA.Charles C. Cui, Vince Mitchell, Bodo B. Schlegelmilch & Bettina Cornwell - 2005 - Journal of Business Ethics 62 (1):57 - 71.
    Previous studies have found Forsyth’s Ethical Position Questionnaire (EPQ) to vary between countries, but none has made a systematic evaluation of its psychometric properties across consumers from many countries. Using confirmatory factor analysis and multi-group LISREL analysis, this paper explores the factor structure of the EPQ and the measurement equivalence in five societies: Austria, Britain, Brunei, Hong Kong and USA. The results suggest that the modified scale, measuring idealism and relativism, was applicable in all five societies. Equivalence was found across (...)
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  32.  20
    Carrotmob: A Win–Win–Win Approach to Creating Benefits for Consumers, Business, and Society at Large.Robert Mai, Stefan Hoffmann & Katharina Hutter - 2016 - Business and Society 55 (7):1059-1077.
    The call for business practices that create benefits for companies, customers, and society is getting louder. This article analyzes a new implementation of such a win–win–win approach: the carrotmob. Activists and managers jointly organize a shopping flashmob in which consumers collectively purchase the products of a target company to reward its intent to act more socially responsible. Given that carrotmobs are only efficient if they are supported by a critical mass of consumers, a survey study of 337 young consumers (...)
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  33.  19
    Consuming, Engaging and Confronting Science: The Emerging Dimensions of Scientific Citizenship.Margareta Bertilsson & Mark Elam - 2003 - European Journal of Social Theory 6 (2):233-251.
    As the distance between science and society is collapsed with the growth of contemporary knowledge societies, so a range of different approaches to the democratic governance of science superseding its Enlightenment government is emerging. In light of these different approaches, this article focuses on the figure of the scientific citizen and the variable dimensions of a new scientific citizenship. Three models of democracy - advanced consumer, deliberative and radical/pluralist - are put forward as both partly competing and partly (...)
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  34. Combatting Consumer Madness.Wayne Henry, Mort Morehouse & Susan T. Gardner - 2017 - Teaching Ethics.
    In his 2004 article “Hannah Arendt and Jean Baudrillard: Pedagogy in the Consumer Society,” Trevor Norris bemoans the degree to which contemporary education’s focus can increasingly be described as primarily nurturing “consumers in training.” He goes on to add that the consequences of such “mindless” consumerism is that it “erodes democratic life, reduces education to the reproduction of private accumulation, prevents social resistance from expressing itself as anything other than political apathy, and transforms all human relations into commercial (...)
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  35.  35
    Consumer protection and electronic commerce in the Sultanate of Oman.Rakesh Belwal, Rahima Al Shibli & Shweta Belwal - 2021 - Journal of Information, Communication and Ethics in Society 19 (1):38-60.
    PurposeWithin a larger mandate of reviewing the key global trends concerning consumer protection in the electronic commerce (e-commerce) literature, this study aims to study the legal framework concerning e-commerce and consumer protection in the Sultanate of Oman and to analyse the current regulations concerning e-commerce and consumer protection.Design/methodology/approachThis study followed the normative legal research approach and resorted to the desk research process to facilitate content analysis of literature containing consumer protection legislation and regulatory provisions in Oman (...)
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  36.  50
    Measuring consumers' ethical position in Austria, Britain, Brunei, Hong Kong and USA.C. C. Cui, V. Mitchell, B. Schlegelmilch & T. B. Cornwell - 2005 - Journal of Business Ethics 62 (1):57-71.
    Previous studies have found Forsyth’s Ethical Position Questionnaire (EPQ) to vary between countries, but none has made a systematic evaluation of its psychometric properties across consumers from many countries. Using confirmatory factor analysis and multi-group LISREL analysis, this paper explores the factor structure of the EPQ and the measurement equivalence in five societies: Austria, Britain, Brunei, Hong Kong and USA. The results suggest that the modified scale, measuring idealism and relativism, was applicable in all five societies. Equivalence was found across (...)
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  37.  15
    Food, Consumer Concerns, and Trust: Food Ethics for a Globalizing Market.F. W. A. Brom & B. Gremmen - 2000 - Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 12 (2):127-139.
    The use of biotechnology in food productiongives rise to consumer concerns. The term ``consumerconcern'' is often used as a container notion. Itincludes concerns about food safety, environmental andanimal welfare consequences of food productionsystems, and intrinsic moral objections againstgenetic modification. In order to create clarity adistinction between three different kinds of consumerconcern is proposed. Consumer concerns can be seen assigns of loss of trust. Maintaining consumer trustasks for governmental action. Towards consumerconcerns, governments seem to have limitedpossibilities for public (...)
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  38.  63
    Consumer Trust, Social Marketing and Ethics of Welfare Exchange.Chong Ju Choi, Tarek Ibrahim Eldomiaty & Sae Won Kim - 2007 - Journal of Business Ethics 74 (1):17-23.
    The global corporate scandals such as Enron, Worldcom and Global Crossing have raised fundamental issues of business ethics as well as economic, social and anthropological questions concerning the nature of business competition and global capitalism. The purpose of this conceptual paper is to introduce the concept of "welfare exchange" to the existing notions of economic, social and anthropological notions of business and exchange in markets and society in the 21st century. Global competition and business success in the 21st century (...)
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  39.  34
    Consumer confusion from price competition and excessive product attributes under the curse of dimensionality.Takeshi Ebina & Keita Kinjo - 2019 - AI and Society 34 (3):615-624.
    The purpose of our study is to investigate the effects of the number of products, product attributes, and prices on consumer confusion, conduct a numerical analysis to check the robustness of the results, and present an example of the cell phone market in Japan. Following an ideal point model and embedding the number of products and product attributes, we clarify how these factors affect consumer confusion and purchase probability. We show that as the number of product attributes increases, (...)
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  40.  14
    World on a Platter? Consuming Geographies and the Place of Food in Society[REVIEW]Rebecca Kennison - 2001 - Body and Society 7 (1):121-125.
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  41.  6
    Influence of consumer culture on a person: diversification of values, ethics and meaning, decline of happiness.Marina Grigorieva - 2020 - Kant 35 (2):142-147.
    Modern consumer society leads a superficial and individualized life characterized by trivial values and ultimately the loss of all purpose. The problem is cultural distortion and the resulting diversification of values, ethics, and meaning. In this regard, consumer culture is a threat to well-being through the environment, health and social structure. The importance of critical discourse on this issue is that it highlights the tension between individual freedom and social justice, feelings of happiness, and levels of consumption.
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  42.  29
    Irrational Consumer Behavior in Financial Services.Jukka M. Laitamaki, Raija Järvinen & Uolevi Lehtinen - 2008 - Proceedings of the International Association for Business and Society 19:16-22.
    Consumer driven and globally competitive financial markets are crucial for the future prosperity of the Finnish society (Laitamäki, Lehti and Paasio 1996). The largest transfer of wealth in history is currently taking place as Baby Boomers (born 1946-1964) prepare for their retirement and inherit the assets of the previous generation. Due to cognitive limitations and emotional biases these consumers don’t always make rational decisions with financial services. This conceptual study addresses irrational financial consumer behavior and its impact (...)
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  43.  92
    Food, consumer concerns, and trust: Food ethics for a globalizing market. [REVIEW]Frans W. A. Brom - 2000 - Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 12 (2):127-139.
    The use of biotechnology in food productiongives rise to consumer concerns. The term ``consumerconcern'' is often used as a container notion. Itincludes concerns about food safety, environmental andanimal welfare consequences of food productionsystems, and intrinsic moral objections againstgenetic modification. In order to create clarity adistinction between three different kinds of consumerconcern is proposed. Consumer concerns can be seen assigns of loss of trust. Maintaining consumer trustasks for governmental action. Towards consumerconcerns, governments seem to have limitedpossibilities for public (...)
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  44.  53
    Taking consumers seriously: Two concepts of consumer sovereignty. [REVIEW]Michiel Korthals - 2000 - Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 14 (2):201-215.
    Governments, producers, and international free tradeorganizations like the World Trade Organization (WTO) areincreasingly confronted with consumers who not only buy (or don'tbuy) goods, but also demand that those goods are producedconforming to certain ethical (often diverse) standards. Not onlysafety and health belong to these ethical ideals, but animalwelfare, environmental concerns, labor circumstances, and fairtrade. However, this phantom haunts the dusty world of social andpolitical philosophy as well. The new concept ``consumersovereignty'' bypasses the conceptual dichotomy of consumer andcitizen.According to the (...)
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  45.  36
    Consuming the Planet to Excess.John Urry - 2010 - Theory, Culture and Society 27 (2-3):191-212.
    This article examines some major changes relating to the contemporary conditions of life upon Earth. It deals especially with emergent contradictions that stem from shifts within capitalism in the rich North over the course of the last century or so. These shifts involve moving from low-carbon to high-carbon economies/societies, from societies of discipline to societies of control, and more recently from specialized and differentiated zones of consumption to mobile, de-differentiated consumptions of excess. Societies become centres of conspicuous, wasteful consumption. The (...)
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  46.  32
    Advertising's Impact on Morality in Society: Influencing Habits and Desires of Consumers.Andrew Gustafson - 2001 - Business and Society Review 106 (3):201-223.
  47.  15
    Consumer magazines and ethical guidelines.Vicki Hesterman - 1987 - Journal of Mass Media Ethics 2 (2):93 – 101.
    Americans read more than 10 magazines per month. Despite the profound effect this exposure has on individuals and society, little research has been done into ethical standards of magazines. Results of this pilot study of 100 consumer magazines indicate a considerable lack of standard practices and few ethical guidelines.
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  48.  12
    The Problematization of New Poverty in the Consumer Capitalistic Society : The Portrait of New Poverty in “Things”, “The Fantastic Maze for Ants” and “Hotel Euro, 1203”.Yoon-hee Joung - 2020 - Cogito 92:103-133.
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    Consumers’ ethical orientation and pro-firm behavioral response to CSR.KyuJin Shim & Soojin Kim - 2019 - Asian Journal of Business Ethics 8 (2):127-154.
    This study identifies the roles of consumers’ ethical orientations and CSR motives and the dynamics of these two variables on the subsequent consumers’ attitudinal and behavioral responses to CSR—perceived corporate authenticity and pro-firm behavioral intentions. To examine the impact of individual consumers’ ethical orientations, the authors measured consumers’ ethical orientations such as deontology and consequentialism through a Web-based survey conducted in Korea and in the USA. Further, to investigate the role of perceived CSR motives, the authors measured the perception of (...)
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  50.  14
    Collaborative Consumers Can Be Ethical Consumers: Adapting the Defining Issues Test to Understand Ethical Reasoning in Collaborative Consumption Markets.Sebastian Müller, Nils Christian Hoffmann, Ludger Heidbrink & Stefan Hoffmann - 2023 - Business and Society 62 (8):1549-1585.
    Collaborative consumption activities like saving food and buying used clothes are an important and rapidly growing part of sustainable consumer behavior. Many political and commercial campaigns promote collaborative consumption practices by highlighting subsets of normative motives, such as sustainable, social, and ecological effects. Whether or not consumers can comprehend these claims and incorporate them into their decision-making process is, however, unclear. This article introduces a new experimental study design to ethical consumer research—an adapted version of the Defining Issues (...)
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