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Understanding emerging forms of food consumption: the role of information and communication technologies (ICTs) in European food governance
Type
fundamental research project
Start Date
January 1, 2013
End Date
January 1, 2016
Status
ongoing
Keywords
food governance
consumer
information and communication technologies
new media
food activism
digital activism
Description
This study examines ways in which new media shape consumer activism and food governance.
Contemporary efforts to change the structure and dynamics of food systems often depend on altering the patterns of consumer behaviour. Yet our current models of how consumers source, share and interpret food-related information are being radically challenged by new sources of information, most prominently social media and other web-supported tools of collective organization.
Future interventions into food systems will depend on developing an improved understanding of these new media of consumer activism, the ways in which they mediate the advice and mandate of governing actors, and what they reveal about the types of information important to consumers as well as the forms of action they find effective and feasible.
The key questions to be addressed include the following:
- What kinds of information and communications technologies are available and how are they mobilized to empower food consumers?
- What kind of knowledge counts and who holds the right expertise in this field?
- How is industry involved?
This research examines how consumers use these new systems, whether internet-based consumer organisations, mobile apps or other emergent technologies, and how their engagement is reshaping contemporary modes of food governance.
Contemporary efforts to change the structure and dynamics of food systems often depend on altering the patterns of consumer behaviour. Yet our current models of how consumers source, share and interpret food-related information are being radically challenged by new sources of information, most prominently social media and other web-supported tools of collective organization.
Future interventions into food systems will depend on developing an improved understanding of these new media of consumer activism, the ways in which they mediate the advice and mandate of governing actors, and what they reveal about the types of information important to consumers as well as the forms of action they find effective and feasible.
The key questions to be addressed include the following:
- What kinds of information and communications technologies are available and how are they mobilized to empower food consumers?
- What kind of knowledge counts and who holds the right expertise in this field?
- How is industry involved?
This research examines how consumers use these new systems, whether internet-based consumer organisations, mobile apps or other emergent technologies, and how their engagement is reshaping contemporary modes of food governance.
Leader contributor(s)
Ulijaszek, Stanley
Lezaun, Javier
Dolan, Catherine
Member contributor(s)
Eli, Karin
Partner(s)
Members of the Oxford Food Governance Group [https://oxfordfoodgovernancegroup.wordpress.com ]: Dr. Catherine Dolan, Dr. Karin Eli, Associate Professor Javier Lezaun, Dr. Tanja Schneider, Prof. Stanley Ulijaszek
Funder
Topic(s)
food governance
consumer
information and communication technologies
new media
food activism
digital activism
Method(s)
Virtual ethnography
qualitative interviews
document analysis
Range
School
Range (De)
School
Principal
Oxford Martin School Future of Food Programme, University of Oxford, GB
Eprints ID
245178
results