Ethical Trade Communication as Mediation: Shifting the Focus of “Political Consumerism”

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Abstract

This conceptual article proposes an approach to ethical consumption which is an alternative to “political consumerism”. By illuminating the aspects typically overlooked in political consumerism research, it re-embeds individualized ethical consumption in (1) the broader movement, (2) the communicative process, and (3) the social context. By adopting the notion of “ethical trade” it decenters individualized consumption as the exclusive way of enacting ethics in the marketplace, and by focusing on communication, it turns the spotlight away from individual consumers and onto organizations. Drawing extensively on communication studies, it is proposed that the main function of ethical trade organizations is to mediate between the geographically separated consumers and producers. Furthermore, greater sensitivity to the social context is introduced by distinguishing between two modes of mediation: “mediated familiarity” (the transmission of factual knowledge and the construction of affinity) and “moral education” (the subjectification of consumers who consider their impact on “distant others”)
Original languageEnglish
JournalJournal of Nonprofit & Public Sector Marketing
Volume33
Issue number2
Pages (from-to)149-167
Number of pages19
ISSN1049-5142
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Mar 2021
MoE publication typeA1 Journal article-refereed

Fields of Science

  • 518 Media and communications
  • Communication
  • 5141 Sociology
  • political consumerism
  • moral education
  • mediation
  • mediated familiarity
  • ethical trade

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