No crumb shall be left behind. Perceptions of food waste across generations

This paper aims to explore whether there are age-specific differences in perceptions about food waste in two groups of women living in Bucharest (born in/after 1989 vs mature in 1989), as well as the extent to which such perceptions are influenced by relatively recent periods of food shortage they m...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of comparative research in anthropology and sociology 2017-12, Vol.8 (2), p.17-42
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description This paper aims to explore whether there are age-specific differences in perceptions about food waste in two groups of women living in Bucharest (born in/after 1989 vs mature in 1989), as well as the extent to which such perceptions are influenced by relatively recent periods of food shortage they may have experienced/heard of (Communism, the transition period). While circumstances such as the difference in the pace of personal/professional lives, available budgets as well as other wider-scale economic factors (such as a general food shortage) are proven to dictate, to a large extent, how the elder group acquire food, it will be argued that their present-day beliefs about the value of food and strategies to avoid food waste appear to be rooted in their childhood experiences. Additionally, members of the elder group seem to have developed food saving and recycling practices that inadvertently transform them into exemplary eco-friendly citizens.
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source DOAJ Directory of Open Access Journals; Elektronische Zeitschriftenbibliothek - Frei zugängliche E-Journals; Sociological Abstracts
subjects Age
Age differences
Aging
Birth order
Budgets
Childhood experiences
Childhood factors
Communism
Consumption
Economic factors
Families & family life
Food
Food saving
food shortage
Food supply
food waste
Generations
Mannheim, Karl (1893-1947)
Perceptions
post-communism
Public policy
Recycling
Semiotics
Social Sciences
Sociology
Women
title No crumb shall be left behind. Perceptions of food waste across generations
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