“…Across multiple domains, research has identified a variety of factors that drive consumers' post-scandal purchase intentions, including corporate social responsibility evaluations (Klein & Dawar, 2004;Russell, Russell, & Honea, 2016), preexisting brand relationships (Dawar & Pillutla, 2000;Grégoire & Fisher, 2008;Grégoire, Tripp, & Legoux, 2009), attributions of blame (e.g., Folkes, 1988;Guckian et al, 2018;Lei, Dawar, & Gürhan-Canli, 2012), proximity to the scandal (e.g., Guckian et al, 2018;Johnson, Matear, & Thomson, 2010), and moral self-conscious emotions Guckian et al, 2018;. Extant research in this domain has largely relied on the use of vignettes and/or stimulus narratives-based in part on prior instances of wrongdoing-to examine the nature of the relationship between corporate wrongdoing and consumer reactions (Grappi et al, 2013).…”