
Social identification, social representations, and consumer innovativeness
in an organic food context: A cross-national comparison
Jos Bartels and Machiel J. Reinders
Abstract
The aim of this study was to compare the role of (1) demographic characteristics,
(2) domain-specific innovativeness, (3) social representation of new
foods, and (4) social identification on the adoption of new organic
food products.
Three studies in the United States (N = 1001), the United
Kingdom (N = 1010), and Germany (N = 961) show that social identification
is an important predictor of organic food consumption aside from
domain-specific innovativeness. The influence of social representation
components differs
between countries, and demographics are less important predictors
of organic food consumption behaviour.
This study shows that the relationship
between an individual and his/her social environment as explained
by
social identification is at least as important as domain-specific
innovativeness in predicting new product adoption. In addition, comparing
the predictive
ability of these constructs in a cross-national context brings
added value to current knowledge on the adoption of new foods. Implications
and directions for future research are described.
Source
Food Quality and Preference (2010) 21: 347-352
Author Locations and Affilations
Agricultural Economics Research Institute (LEI), Wageningen University
and Research Centre, P.O. Box 29703, 2502 LS The Hague, The Netherlands
en français
Posted February 2010
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