Which types of knowledge about organic products are consumers interested in?

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingArticle in proceedingsResearchpeer-review

Standard

Which types of knowledge about organic products are consumers interested in? / Christensen, Tove; Thorsøe, Martin Hvarregaard; Povlsen, Karen Klitgaard.

Food futures: ethics, science and culture. ed. / I. Anna S. Olsson; Sofia M. Araújo; M. Fátima Vieira. Wageningen Academic Publishers, 2016. p. 321-328.

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingArticle in proceedingsResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Christensen, T, Thorsøe, MH & Povlsen, KK 2016, Which types of knowledge about organic products are consumers interested in? in IAS Olsson, SM Araújo & MF Vieira (eds), Food futures: ethics, science and culture. Wageningen Academic Publishers, pp. 321-328, EurSafe 2016, Porto, Portugal, 28/09/2016.

APA

Christensen, T., Thorsøe, M. H., & Povlsen, K. K. (2016). Which types of knowledge about organic products are consumers interested in? In I. A. S. Olsson, S. M. Araújo, & M. F. Vieira (Eds.), Food futures: ethics, science and culture (pp. 321-328). Wageningen Academic Publishers.

Vancouver

Christensen T, Thorsøe MH, Povlsen KK. Which types of knowledge about organic products are consumers interested in? In Olsson IAS, Araújo SM, Vieira MF, editors, Food futures: ethics, science and culture. Wageningen Academic Publishers. 2016. p. 321-328

Author

Christensen, Tove ; Thorsøe, Martin Hvarregaard ; Povlsen, Karen Klitgaard. / Which types of knowledge about organic products are consumers interested in?. Food futures: ethics, science and culture. editor / I. Anna S. Olsson ; Sofia M. Araújo ; M. Fátima Vieira. Wageningen Academic Publishers, 2016. pp. 321-328

Bibtex

@inproceedings{8f5247a50ed54bd08a3095f937ca03aa,
title = "Which types of knowledge about organic products are consumers interested in?",
abstract = "Knowledge and trust are important concepts which help to explain consumers{\textquoteright} engagement with organics. It has often been stated that knowledge leads to trust. However, by digging deeper into the relationship between knowledge and trust in relation to organics, a recent Danish study found that trust to a certain extent seemed to replace knowledge and thereby offered consumers a choice between knowledge and trust in their relationship with organics. Indeed, they found that the majority of consumers trusted organics despite knowing little. They also found that a significant part of consumers seemed to have a reflexive and deliberate lack of knowledge in their engagement with organics. As a consequence, an increase in the supply of information is not likely to fundamentally change the configuration of knowledge and trust in the food system. The purpose of the present paper is to investigate which types of knowledge about organics that consumers would be interested in, with particular focus on information concerning differences between organic and non-organic products. A nationwide web-based consumer survey was combined with face-to-face interviews in terms of a focus group and four semi-structured individual interviews recruited among the survey participants. Our preliminary analysis indicated that a lot of people were interested in learning more about the difference between organic and non-organic production. We found that additional information about animal welfare, health, and general differences between rules and characteristics of the different production systems were the most often stated areas – and also information on climatic and environmental impacts and traceability scored high. However, our results also indicated that at least 40 % of the respondents were not interested in increasing their knowledge – and that knowledge concerning the values of the producer/seller might be just as important for consumers as specific knowledge concerning the production methods. An important next step will be to identify how to target interested consumers with the type of information they are motivated to take in. Here, social media provide an opportunity but also a challenge.",
author = "Tove Christensen and Thors{\o}e, {Martin Hvarregaard} and Povlsen, {Karen Klitgaard}",
year = "2016",
language = "English",
isbn = "978-90-8686-288-7",
pages = "321--328",
editor = "Olsson, {I. Anna S. } and Ara{\'u}jo, {Sofia M.} and Vieira, {M. F{\'a}tima}",
booktitle = "Food futures",
publisher = "Wageningen Academic Publishers",
address = "Netherlands",
note = "null ; Conference date: 28-09-2016 Through 08-10-2016",
url = "http://www.ibmc.up.pt/eursafe2016/",

}

RIS

TY - GEN

T1 - Which types of knowledge about organic products are consumers interested in?

AU - Christensen, Tove

AU - Thorsøe, Martin Hvarregaard

AU - Povlsen, Karen Klitgaard

PY - 2016

Y1 - 2016

N2 - Knowledge and trust are important concepts which help to explain consumers’ engagement with organics. It has often been stated that knowledge leads to trust. However, by digging deeper into the relationship between knowledge and trust in relation to organics, a recent Danish study found that trust to a certain extent seemed to replace knowledge and thereby offered consumers a choice between knowledge and trust in their relationship with organics. Indeed, they found that the majority of consumers trusted organics despite knowing little. They also found that a significant part of consumers seemed to have a reflexive and deliberate lack of knowledge in their engagement with organics. As a consequence, an increase in the supply of information is not likely to fundamentally change the configuration of knowledge and trust in the food system. The purpose of the present paper is to investigate which types of knowledge about organics that consumers would be interested in, with particular focus on information concerning differences between organic and non-organic products. A nationwide web-based consumer survey was combined with face-to-face interviews in terms of a focus group and four semi-structured individual interviews recruited among the survey participants. Our preliminary analysis indicated that a lot of people were interested in learning more about the difference between organic and non-organic production. We found that additional information about animal welfare, health, and general differences between rules and characteristics of the different production systems were the most often stated areas – and also information on climatic and environmental impacts and traceability scored high. However, our results also indicated that at least 40 % of the respondents were not interested in increasing their knowledge – and that knowledge concerning the values of the producer/seller might be just as important for consumers as specific knowledge concerning the production methods. An important next step will be to identify how to target interested consumers with the type of information they are motivated to take in. Here, social media provide an opportunity but also a challenge.

AB - Knowledge and trust are important concepts which help to explain consumers’ engagement with organics. It has often been stated that knowledge leads to trust. However, by digging deeper into the relationship between knowledge and trust in relation to organics, a recent Danish study found that trust to a certain extent seemed to replace knowledge and thereby offered consumers a choice between knowledge and trust in their relationship with organics. Indeed, they found that the majority of consumers trusted organics despite knowing little. They also found that a significant part of consumers seemed to have a reflexive and deliberate lack of knowledge in their engagement with organics. As a consequence, an increase in the supply of information is not likely to fundamentally change the configuration of knowledge and trust in the food system. The purpose of the present paper is to investigate which types of knowledge about organics that consumers would be interested in, with particular focus on information concerning differences between organic and non-organic products. A nationwide web-based consumer survey was combined with face-to-face interviews in terms of a focus group and four semi-structured individual interviews recruited among the survey participants. Our preliminary analysis indicated that a lot of people were interested in learning more about the difference between organic and non-organic production. We found that additional information about animal welfare, health, and general differences between rules and characteristics of the different production systems were the most often stated areas – and also information on climatic and environmental impacts and traceability scored high. However, our results also indicated that at least 40 % of the respondents were not interested in increasing their knowledge – and that knowledge concerning the values of the producer/seller might be just as important for consumers as specific knowledge concerning the production methods. An important next step will be to identify how to target interested consumers with the type of information they are motivated to take in. Here, social media provide an opportunity but also a challenge.

UR - http://www.wageningenacademic.com/doi/10.3920/978-90-8686-834-6_49

M3 - Article in proceedings

SN - 978-90-8686-288-7

SP - 321

EP - 328

BT - Food futures

A2 - Olsson, I. Anna S.

A2 - Araújo, Sofia M.

A2 - Vieira, M. Fátima

PB - Wageningen Academic Publishers

Y2 - 28 September 2016 through 8 October 2016

ER -

ID: 166951209