2020
DOI: 10.1111/ijcs.12577
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Thou shalt not covet: Role of family religiosity in anti‐consumption

Abstract: Anti‐consumption movements, as resistance or rejection of consumption, are opposed in nature to the values of materialism or the idea that possessions are essential to happiness. This article links one anti‐consumption practice, voluntary simplicity, to family religiosity by exploring whether parents' religiosity induces reduced levels of materialism in their children. Children aged 6–14 years and their parents in three secular and one religious school were surveyed, and data were analysed using structural equ… Show more

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Cited by 20 publications
(22 citation statements)
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“…To further reveal the nomological network of consumer confidence and its boundary conditions, we encourage research on salient aspects of luxury consumer behaviour types hitherto not studied in the consumer confidence literature (for a review of luxury goods consumption, see Dhaliwal et al (2020). These include (but are by no means limited to) inconspicuous luxury consumption (Berger & Ward, 2010), financial consumption behaviours (Barbić et al, 2019), anti-consumption (Casabayó et al, 2020) and consumption in the peer-to-peer economy (Berg et al, 2020).…”
Section: Limitati On S and Future Re S E Archmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…To further reveal the nomological network of consumer confidence and its boundary conditions, we encourage research on salient aspects of luxury consumer behaviour types hitherto not studied in the consumer confidence literature (for a review of luxury goods consumption, see Dhaliwal et al (2020). These include (but are by no means limited to) inconspicuous luxury consumption (Berger & Ward, 2010), financial consumption behaviours (Barbić et al, 2019), anti-consumption (Casabayó et al, 2020) and consumption in the peer-to-peer economy (Berg et al, 2020).…”
Section: Limitati On S and Future Re S E Archmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The voluntary simplicity Facebook group description quoted above echoes some of the key characteristics of this lifestyle. This deliberate lifestyle choice has a substantive influence on its advocates’ consumption patterns (Casabayó et al., 2020). Limiting consumption and preferring sustainable products and services are integral aspects of this lifestyle.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A recent comprehensive review of the voluntary simplicity concept indicates that most studies in this area have used traditional research methods (Rebouças & Soares, 2020). Several academic studies in this research stream relied on in‐depth interviews (e.g., Osikominu & Bocken, 2020; Rich et al., 2020) or collected data via self‐reported surveys from relatively small samples of simplifiers (e.g., Casabayó et al., 2020; Dorsaf et al., 2020). The reliance on small samples in the voluntary simplicity literature stems from the challenge of identifying and accessing voluntary simplifiers within the larger society.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Religiosity can directly influence the ethical perception and behaviour of salespeople and customers (Aziz, 2018; Karami et al., 2014; Uysal & Okumuş, 2019; Vitell et al., 2018). Consumer product purchasing is dependent on religiosity (Abd Rahman, 2015; Aksoy & Abdulfatai, 2019; Casabayó et al., 2020; Casidy & Almossawi, 2014; Jamshidi & Hussin, 2016; Mukhtar & Butt, 2012). Religiosity influences consumers’ willingness to accept premium prices and willingness to adopt pro‐environmental behaviour (Hwang, 2018; Minton et al., 2018; Roshani Perera & Rathnasiri Hewege, 2018).…”
Section: Findings and Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%