You Are Where You Eat: A Theoretical Perspective on Why Identity Matters in Local Food Groups

Publikation: Beiträge in ZeitschriftenZeitschriftenaufsätzeForschungbegutachtet

Standard

You Are Where You Eat: A Theoretical Perspective on Why Identity Matters in Local Food Groups. / Poeggel, Karoline.
in: Frontiers in Sustainable Food Systems, Jahrgang 6, 782556, 23.02.2022.

Publikation: Beiträge in ZeitschriftenZeitschriftenaufsätzeForschungbegutachtet

Harvard

APA

Vancouver

Bibtex

@article{f90a999d13734c62bacba49e3f46ea6e,
title = "You Are Where You Eat: A Theoretical Perspective on Why Identity Matters in Local Food Groups",
abstract = "Grassroots initiatives, such as local food groups have been identified as a crucial element for a transformation toward more sustainable societies. However, relevant questions to better understand the dynamics of local food initiatives remain unanswered, in particular regarding the people involved. Who are the members in local food initiatives, what motivates individuals to get active in such groups and what keeps people engaged over the long term. This theoretical study presents a conceptual framework drawing on social psychology to describe the connection between identity processes at individual and collective levels in grassroots initiatives, such as local food groups. The framework presented is a guide for researchers in analyzing individuals' identities and their role in and across local food groups and other grassroots initiatives by recognizing identity processes of identification, verification and formation. By providing a more nuanced understanding of how individuals and individuals within groups interact in these grassroots initiatives as spaces of effective environmental action, this framework provides an in-depth perspective on the social dimension of local food systems. More specifically, by focusing on identity dynamics the framework makes a connection between the distinctive kinds of sociality and community that grassroots initiatives offer, their relevance for individuals' involvement and the opportunities to enable transformation.",
keywords = "identity dynamics, social sustainability, local food systems, transformation, social identity, collective identity, grassroots initiatives, Sustainability Governance",
author = "Karoline Poeggel",
note = "Funding Information: This research was made possible within the Graduate School Processes of Sustainability Transformation, which is a cooperation between Leuphana University of L{\"u}neburg and the Robert Bosch Stiftung. I gratefully acknowledge the financial support from the Robert Bosch Stiftung (12.5.F082.0021.0). Publisher Copyright: Copyright {\textcopyright} 2022 Poeggel.",
year = "2022",
month = feb,
day = "23",
doi = "10.3389/fsufs.2022.782556",
language = "English",
volume = "6",
journal = "Frontiers in Sustainable Food Systems",
issn = "2571-581X",
publisher = "Frontiers Media",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - You Are Where You Eat: A Theoretical Perspective on Why Identity Matters in Local Food Groups

AU - Poeggel, Karoline

N1 - Funding Information: This research was made possible within the Graduate School Processes of Sustainability Transformation, which is a cooperation between Leuphana University of Lüneburg and the Robert Bosch Stiftung. I gratefully acknowledge the financial support from the Robert Bosch Stiftung (12.5.F082.0021.0). Publisher Copyright: Copyright © 2022 Poeggel.

PY - 2022/2/23

Y1 - 2022/2/23

N2 - Grassroots initiatives, such as local food groups have been identified as a crucial element for a transformation toward more sustainable societies. However, relevant questions to better understand the dynamics of local food initiatives remain unanswered, in particular regarding the people involved. Who are the members in local food initiatives, what motivates individuals to get active in such groups and what keeps people engaged over the long term. This theoretical study presents a conceptual framework drawing on social psychology to describe the connection between identity processes at individual and collective levels in grassroots initiatives, such as local food groups. The framework presented is a guide for researchers in analyzing individuals' identities and their role in and across local food groups and other grassroots initiatives by recognizing identity processes of identification, verification and formation. By providing a more nuanced understanding of how individuals and individuals within groups interact in these grassroots initiatives as spaces of effective environmental action, this framework provides an in-depth perspective on the social dimension of local food systems. More specifically, by focusing on identity dynamics the framework makes a connection between the distinctive kinds of sociality and community that grassroots initiatives offer, their relevance for individuals' involvement and the opportunities to enable transformation.

AB - Grassroots initiatives, such as local food groups have been identified as a crucial element for a transformation toward more sustainable societies. However, relevant questions to better understand the dynamics of local food initiatives remain unanswered, in particular regarding the people involved. Who are the members in local food initiatives, what motivates individuals to get active in such groups and what keeps people engaged over the long term. This theoretical study presents a conceptual framework drawing on social psychology to describe the connection between identity processes at individual and collective levels in grassroots initiatives, such as local food groups. The framework presented is a guide for researchers in analyzing individuals' identities and their role in and across local food groups and other grassroots initiatives by recognizing identity processes of identification, verification and formation. By providing a more nuanced understanding of how individuals and individuals within groups interact in these grassroots initiatives as spaces of effective environmental action, this framework provides an in-depth perspective on the social dimension of local food systems. More specifically, by focusing on identity dynamics the framework makes a connection between the distinctive kinds of sociality and community that grassroots initiatives offer, their relevance for individuals' involvement and the opportunities to enable transformation.

KW - identity dynamics

KW - social sustainability

KW - local food systems

KW - transformation

KW - social identity

KW - collective identity

KW - grassroots initiatives

KW - Sustainability Governance

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85126193413&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.3389/fsufs.2022.782556

DO - 10.3389/fsufs.2022.782556

M3 - Journal articles

VL - 6

JO - Frontiers in Sustainable Food Systems

JF - Frontiers in Sustainable Food Systems

SN - 2571-581X

M1 - 782556

ER -

Dokumente

DOI

Zuletzt angesehen

Publikationen

  1. Evidence-Based Management and Organizational Reality
  2. LCSA in the regions - state of the art, mainstreaming conditions and upscaling approaches
  3. The Shareholder Value Effect of System Overloads: An Analysis of Investor Responses to the 2003 Blackout in the US
  4. Ports
  5. 43. Decoding Spontaneous Thoughts From Brain Resting-State fMRI: Toward Understanding Rumination
  6. Foundations of Management & Entrepreneurship: Courses and Cases
  7. Performance-Determining Variables of a Simulated Skimo Sprint Competition in Elite Junior Skimo Athletes
  8. Responsivity as a transdisciplinary research principle
  9. Carbon content and other soil properties of near-surface peats before and after peatland restoration
  10. Stabilizing the grid with regional virtual power plants
  11. The effect of industrialization and globalization on domestic land-use
  12. Evidence-based policy-making?
  13. Positiv, Positivität
  14. Migration
  15. Delivering community benefits through REDD plus : Lessons from Joint Forest Management in Zambia
  16. Learning for sustainable development in regional networks
  17. Risky Business
  18. Learning Processes in the Early Development of Sustainable Niches
  19. How to Explain Major Policy Change Towards Sustainability? Bringing Together the Multiple Streams Framework and the Multilevel Perspective on Socio-Technical Transitions to Explore the German “Energiewende”
  20. Controlling consent
  21. Impact of anthropogenic input on physicochemical parameters and trace metals in marine surface sediments of Bay of Bengal off Chennai, India
  22. Variations on Klee’s Cosmographic Method
  23. A comparison of self-reports and electrodermal activity as indicators of mathematics state anxiety.
  24. Digitalization, new media, and education for sustainable development
  25. The hidden power of language
  26. The Values in Crisis Project
  27. History and progress of the generation of structural formulae in chemistry and its applications.
  28. A fragile kaleidoscope
  29. Readings in applied organizational behavior from the Lüneburg Symposium
  30. Discovering cooperation
  31. Sustainability-Oriented Innovation of SMEs
  32. ‘Forewarned is Forearmed’: Overcoming Multifaceted Challenges of Digital Innovation Units