Consumer Ethics of Adolescents

American youth are spending in record numbers, often being characterized as the most materialistic generation in history. Young people are also responsible for a significant portion of retail fraud and theft in America. As yet, research has not examined the link between these trends. This research p...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of marketing theory and practice 2016-01, Vol.24 (1), p.91-108
Hauptverfasser: Flurry, Laura A., Swimberghe, Krist
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description American youth are spending in record numbers, often being characterized as the most materialistic generation in history. Young people are also responsible for a significant portion of retail fraud and theft in America. As yet, research has not examined the link between these trends. This research proposes a theoretical framework for examining adolescent ethical judgment and tests hypotheses with a national sample of 250 parent-child pairs. Results indicate that as adolescents mature, ethical judgment improves. In addition, materialism and love of money negatively affect adolescent ethical judgment. Finally, significant deterrents to unethical behavior are family parenting style and parent's religiosity.
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source EBSCOhost Business Source Complete; JSTOR Archive Collection A-Z Listing
subjects Behavior
Children & youth
Cognitive development
Consumption
Decision making
Employee theft
Ethics
Families & family life
Influence
Materialism
Parents & parenting
Perceptions
Studies
Teenagers
Trends
title Consumer Ethics of Adolescents
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