A taste for locally produced food - Values, opinions and sociodemographic differences among "organic" and "conventional" consumers

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Standard

A taste for locally produced food - Values, opinions and sociodemographic differences among "organic" and "conventional" consumers. / Ditlevsen, Kia; Denver, Sigrid; Christensen, Tove; Lassen, Jesper.

In: Appetite, Vol. 147, 104544, 2020.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Ditlevsen, K, Denver, S, Christensen, T & Lassen, J 2020, 'A taste for locally produced food - Values, opinions and sociodemographic differences among "organic" and "conventional" consumers', Appetite, vol. 147, 104544. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.appet.2019.104544

APA

Ditlevsen, K., Denver, S., Christensen, T., & Lassen, J. (2020). A taste for locally produced food - Values, opinions and sociodemographic differences among "organic" and "conventional" consumers. Appetite, 147, [104544]. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.appet.2019.104544

Vancouver

Ditlevsen K, Denver S, Christensen T, Lassen J. A taste for locally produced food - Values, opinions and sociodemographic differences among "organic" and "conventional" consumers. Appetite. 2020;147. 104544. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.appet.2019.104544

Author

Ditlevsen, Kia ; Denver, Sigrid ; Christensen, Tove ; Lassen, Jesper. / A taste for locally produced food - Values, opinions and sociodemographic differences among "organic" and "conventional" consumers. In: Appetite. 2020 ; Vol. 147.

Bibtex

@article{59eb2388b0d74aa3aeadf44478048e9c,
title = "A taste for locally produced food - Values, opinions and sociodemographic differences among {"}organic{"} and {"}conventional{"} consumers",
abstract = "Local food has received considerable attention in recent years. It is seen as a response to increased demand for authentic foods, just as organic foods have been considered to be. It is unclear whether organic and local are two complementary or competitive trends in food consumption. This study addresses this question with a mixed methods investigation of why Danish consumers of organic products and conventional consumers of local products choose locally produced food, what values and opinions they associate with local food, and whether there are sociodemographic differences between the groups. The results show that the same values and opinions tended to motivate organic consumers and a group of committed conventional consumers of local foods. However, organic consumers were much more likely to include environmental issues in their deliberations. Another group of local-food consumers did not seem to be motivated by values and opinions when purchasing locally produced foods. Some sociodemographic differences between the groups were found: organic consumers were more likely to live in the capital than committed local consumers; to have a lengthy education than consumers of local foods; and committed local-food consumers were more likely than organic consumers to have a vocational education. The article concludes that while it is to some extent the same preference for authentic food that motivates organic and committed conventional local-food consumers to buy locally produced foods, it is at the same time different types of consumers who prefer (conventional) local food and organic food.",
author = "Kia Ditlevsen and Sigrid Denver and Tove Christensen and Jesper Lassen",
year = "2020",
doi = "10.1016/j.appet.2019.104544",
language = "English",
volume = "147",
journal = "Appetite",
issn = "0195-6663",
publisher = "Elsevier",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - A taste for locally produced food - Values, opinions and sociodemographic differences among "organic" and "conventional" consumers

AU - Ditlevsen, Kia

AU - Denver, Sigrid

AU - Christensen, Tove

AU - Lassen, Jesper

PY - 2020

Y1 - 2020

N2 - Local food has received considerable attention in recent years. It is seen as a response to increased demand for authentic foods, just as organic foods have been considered to be. It is unclear whether organic and local are two complementary or competitive trends in food consumption. This study addresses this question with a mixed methods investigation of why Danish consumers of organic products and conventional consumers of local products choose locally produced food, what values and opinions they associate with local food, and whether there are sociodemographic differences between the groups. The results show that the same values and opinions tended to motivate organic consumers and a group of committed conventional consumers of local foods. However, organic consumers were much more likely to include environmental issues in their deliberations. Another group of local-food consumers did not seem to be motivated by values and opinions when purchasing locally produced foods. Some sociodemographic differences between the groups were found: organic consumers were more likely to live in the capital than committed local consumers; to have a lengthy education than consumers of local foods; and committed local-food consumers were more likely than organic consumers to have a vocational education. The article concludes that while it is to some extent the same preference for authentic food that motivates organic and committed conventional local-food consumers to buy locally produced foods, it is at the same time different types of consumers who prefer (conventional) local food and organic food.

AB - Local food has received considerable attention in recent years. It is seen as a response to increased demand for authentic foods, just as organic foods have been considered to be. It is unclear whether organic and local are two complementary or competitive trends in food consumption. This study addresses this question with a mixed methods investigation of why Danish consumers of organic products and conventional consumers of local products choose locally produced food, what values and opinions they associate with local food, and whether there are sociodemographic differences between the groups. The results show that the same values and opinions tended to motivate organic consumers and a group of committed conventional consumers of local foods. However, organic consumers were much more likely to include environmental issues in their deliberations. Another group of local-food consumers did not seem to be motivated by values and opinions when purchasing locally produced foods. Some sociodemographic differences between the groups were found: organic consumers were more likely to live in the capital than committed local consumers; to have a lengthy education than consumers of local foods; and committed local-food consumers were more likely than organic consumers to have a vocational education. The article concludes that while it is to some extent the same preference for authentic food that motivates organic and committed conventional local-food consumers to buy locally produced foods, it is at the same time different types of consumers who prefer (conventional) local food and organic food.

U2 - 10.1016/j.appet.2019.104544

DO - 10.1016/j.appet.2019.104544

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 31786190

VL - 147

JO - Appetite

JF - Appetite

SN - 0195-6663

M1 - 104544

ER -

ID: 231554420