“…For instance, van der Horst et al's (, p.1514) study involving in‐depth interviews with food bank receivers in the Netherlands revealed that receivers often feel their experience of poverty is not taken seriously by food bank volunteers, and that ‘compulsory gratitude feels degrading, especially when the causes of the current financial situation of the household are being seen as external’. Reflecting on in‐depth qualitative research and literature analysis of the UK case, Lambie‐Mumford and Dowler (, p.1420) explain that people employ a whole range of tactics when faced with crisis, ‘including changes to shopping and eating habits, cutting back on other outgoings, and turning to family and friends for help’, and that food aid is often a last resort. There are clear implications for the ethics of consumption, whereby habits, preferences and tastes might be altered before emergency food sources are sought, with inevitable moral questions about how these decisions are made, who else in a household might be affected, and what the longer term impacts might be on everyday consumption habits such as shopping, cooking, and wasting.…”