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Becoming a tree when I will be dead? Why not! Generation X,Y and Z,and innovative green death practices
Institution:1. Department of Human Studies, LUMSA University of Rome, Piazza delle Vaschette, 101, 00193, Rome, Italy;2. Department of Management and Quantitative Studies, University of Naples Parthenope, Via Generale Parisi, 13, 80132, Naples, Italy;3. Department of Communication and Social Research (CORIS), Sapienza, University of Rome, Via Salaria 113, 00198, Rome, Italy;1. Graduate School of Economics, Osaka University, Japan;2. School of Business Administration, Kwansei Gakuin University, Japan;3. Robert H. Smith School of Business, University of Maryland, USA;1. International Business School, Guangdong University of Finance and Economics, Guangzhou, 510320, China;2. School of Business Administration, Guangdong University of Finance and Economics, Guangzhou, 510320, China
Abstract:Within the theoretical field of ethical consumption, the study focuses on consumer behavior and innovative green death practices. While scarcely investigated in the marketing and consumer behavior research domains, at least four main reasons spur to consider the funeral industry as an interesting subject of enquiry: i) the sector boasts of a significant economic relevance; ii) it is extremely impactful from an environmental and social point of view; iii) it is witnessing interesting innovative processes in the direction of social and environmental sustainability; iv) consumer movements are rising all over the world asking for more sustainable death practices. Thus, adopting an augmented version of the theory of planned behavior (TPB), which includes individuals’ environmentally responsible consumption, and egoistic and altruistic environmental concern, the study investigates behavioral intention to adopt innovative green death practices (a green funeral) of people belonging to three different generations: X, Y, and Z. A purposive sample of 627 Italian people participated in an online the survey. Collected data were analyzed adopting an ordinal logit model. The results confirm the TPB predictive power also in the field of green funeral behavioral intention. Furthermore, environmentally responsible consumption and environmental concern – even though only in its altruistic component – positively influence behavioral intention, and generation exerts a moderating effect among the examined constructs. Overall, the research attempts to enrich the literature on ethical consumption by exploring the underinvestigated phenomenon of buying behavior of unsought and end-of-life products, that of green funerals, and provide managerial recommendations to funeral service sellers.
Keywords:Ethical consumption  TPB  Unsought and end-of-life products  Green death practices  Generation X  Y and Z  Ordinal logit model
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