Internet-enabled access to alternative food networks: A comparison of online and offline food shoppers and their differing interpretations of quality

被引:0
|
作者
Benjamin Wills
Anthony Arundel
机构
[1] University of Tasmania,Australian Innovation Research Centre, Tasmanian School of Business and Economics
[2] University of Maastricht,UNU
来源
关键词
Alternative food networks; Internet retail; Conventions theory; Access equity;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Online food retail has the potential to broaden access to systems of food provision which promote social and environmental quality attributes. This possibility is explored using data from a survey of 365 consumers who purchased food either via internet retailers of local and organic food, or via farmers’ markets, in Vancouver, Canada and Melbourne, Australia. Survey results are analyzed using principal component and regression techniques and interpreted via the theoretical framework of conventions theory. Key findings show that while online retailers of local organic food are not currently attracting more resource constrained consumers, they do appeal to a similar, although broader, array of quality conventions. This research provides new insights into the challenges and opportunities associated with increasing consumer access to alternative food networks, as well as adding to the small number of quantitative studies in the conventions theory literature.
引用
下载
收藏
页码:701 / 712
页数:11
相关论文
共 2 条
  • [1] Internet-enabled access to alternative food networks: A comparison of online and offline food shoppers and their differing interpretations of quality
    Wills, Benjamin
    Arundel, Anthony
    AGRICULTURE AND HUMAN VALUES, 2017, 34 (03) : 701 - 712
  • [2] Intention to access food risk information through Internet-enabled mobile phones: the role of critical thinking
    Aizaki, Hideo
    Nakashima, Yasuhiro
    Ujiie, Kiyokazu
    Takeshita, Hironobu
    Tahara, Kengo
    APPLIED ECONOMICS LETTERS, 2011, 18 (10-12) : 1005 - 1009