Consumer Movements and Value Regimes: Fighting Food Waste in Germany by Building Alternative Object Pathways

Author:

Gollnhofer Johanna F1,Weijo Henri A2,Schouten John W3

Affiliation:

1. University of St. Gallen, 9000 St. Gallen, Switzerland

2. Aalto University School of Business, 00076 Aalto, Espoo, Finland

3. Memorial University, St. John’s, NL A1C 5S7, Canada

Abstract

Abstract Consumer movements strive to change markets when those markets produce value outcomes that conflict with consumers’ higher-order values. Prior studies argue that consumer movements primarily seek to challenge these value outcomes by championing alternative higher-order values or by pressuring institutions to change market governance mechanisms. Building on and refining theorization on value regimes, this study illuminates a new type of consumer movement strategy where consumers collaborate to construct alternative object pathways. The study draws from ethnographic fieldwork in the German retail food sector and shows how building alternative object pathways allowed a consumer movement to mitigate the value regime’s excessive production of food waste. The revised value regime theorization offers a new and more holistic way of understanding and contextualizing how and where consumer movements mobilize for change. It also provides a new tool for understanding systemic value creation and the role of consumers in such processes.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Marketing,Economics and Econometrics,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous),Anthropology,Business and International Management

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