Eating 'Green': Motivations behind organic food consumption in Australia


Autoria(s): Lockie, Stewart; Lyons, Kristen; Lawrence, Geoffrey; Mummery, Kerry
Contribuinte(s)

Henk de Haan

Data(s)

01/01/2002

Resumo

Central to the development of green lifestyles is the consumption of foods that by dint of their status as chemical-free, locally produced and/or free of genetically modified ingredients, reduce the environmental impact of food provision. Yet there are many other factors, such as health concerns, that may also encourage the consumption of 'green' foods. This paper explores the ways in which Australian consumers construct organic food-a sector of the food industry that is currently growing at between 20 and 50 percent per annum but is struggling to keep up with rising consumer demand. In order to examine the significance of 'green' signifiers in the consumption practices of Australian consumers a series of focus group interviews and a national consumer survey were conducted. These examined both those characteristics of food that were valued in general, and those meanings that were associated with organic food in particular. In very general terms, analysis reveals that while consumers believed organic foods to be healthy and environmentally sound-both of which were considered desirable-these characteristics were subsumed by an overarching concern with convenience. This does not mean that consumers did not hold genuinely positive environmental attitudes. Rather, it reflects a range of contradictory beliefs and practices that appeared to derive from the discursive conflict between conventional and organic food industries over environmental, health and safety claims. The paper concludes by identifying the barriers and opportunities for expanding the organic industry in Australia in the context of the ways organics is constructed by consumers.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:62044

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Blackwells

Palavras-Chave #Sociology #New-zealand #Agriculture #Environmentalism #California #Consumer #Movement #Motives #Danish #C1 #370107 Social Change #290102 Food Engineering #750405 Environmental ethics #220000 Social Sciences, Humanities and Arts - General
Tipo

Journal Article