holds a Ph.D. in Business Administration and Management from Università Bocconi, Milan. His research involves the consumption of market minorities (migrants, gays, elderly consumers, bottom-of-the-pyramid consumers) as well as the consumption of collective goods (public space and public health). His research has appeared in the
Identifying the 'religion-ethnicity-wellbeing' nexus as an understudied topic in marketing and consumer behavior research, we propose three main trajectories for future research: Firstly, given the politics of religions, there is a need for studying societies that suffer from and are affected by religio-ethnic tensions and also different types of risks that threaten people's wellbeing in such contexts. Secondly, future research should investigate how and why markets may generate and mediate religio-ethnic prejudices and antagonism that put society's wellbeing at risk. Thirdly, with the upsurge of transcultural alternative religiosities/spiritualities, researchers should examine how through the processes of religious hybridization and hybrid consumption people change their existing consumption patterns and how alternative religiosities/spiritualities influence their sense of wellbeing, particularly in contexts where religious shifts are resisted.
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