2014
DOI: 10.3390/su6118195
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Can Consumers Understand Sustainability through Seafood Eco-Labels? A U.S. and UK Case Study

Abstract: Abstract:In the United States and the United Kingdom, over the last decade major retail chains have increasingly publicized their efforts to supply sustainably sourced and eco-labelled seafood. Debate exists over the extent of consumer demand for this product. Seafood eco-labels purportedly resolve the information asymmetry between producer and consumer, allowing consumers who care about sustainability to easily find and purchase these products. This paper discusses the idealized model of seafood eco-labelling… Show more

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Cited by 75 publications
(80 citation statements)
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References 35 publications
(54 reference statements)
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“…The findings do not confirm the evidence supplied by other studies on the topic [23,27,[42][43][44][45][46]52]. A possible explanation on this front may refer to the narrower scope of the consumer engagement construct, which only addressed the actual behavior when touching on problems for which there is a legitimate cause for complaint.…”
Section: Research Contribution and Originality: Theoretical And Practcontrasting
confidence: 82%
“…The findings do not confirm the evidence supplied by other studies on the topic [23,27,[42][43][44][45][46]52]. A possible explanation on this front may refer to the narrower scope of the consumer engagement construct, which only addressed the actual behavior when touching on problems for which there is a legitimate cause for complaint.…”
Section: Research Contribution and Originality: Theoretical And Practcontrasting
confidence: 82%
“…This result is surprising because the lack of knowledge was frequently purported to be a reason for the lack of interest and preference for sustainable fish (Feucht & Zander, 2015) because consumers might underestimate the consequences of their purchase decisions for or against sustainable products due to their lack of knowledge (Brécard, Hlaimi, Lucas, Perraudeau, & Salladarre, 2009). Different studies highlight the fact that knowledge about seafood seems to be frequently limited even though a generic understanding of sustainability in seafood exists Arvanitoyannis, Krystallis, Panagiotaki, & Theodorou, 2004;Feucht & Zander, 2015;Gutierrez & Thornton, 2014;Schlag & Ystgaard, 2013;Verbeke et al, 2007a). Almeida, Altintzoglou, Cabral, & Vaz (2015) and Honkanen, Olsen, & Verplanken (2005) highlighted that higher knowledge is not necessarily related to more sustainable seafood choices.…”
Section: Wtp In Different Consumer Segmentsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Aquaculture has its own set of sustainability concerns including pollution from feed and waste and escapes of aquaculture animals management [22][23][24]. This tendency has been conceptualised as a logic model by Alexis Gutierrez and Thomas Thornton [25] (see Figure 1.) Figure 1. Consumer-driven logic for ecolabels.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Notwithstanding the prevalence of this logic model, some researchers question the efficacy of consumer-oriented research tools [25] and price incentives [26]. An "attitude-behaviour gap" has been used to describe how, in the case of sustainable food consumption, attitudes alone are often a poor predictor of how consumers will behave at the checkout [27].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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