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Exploring the dynamics of food routines: a practice-based study to understand households’ daily life

Margot Dyen (UMR MOISA Montpellier SupAgro, Montpellier, France)
Lucie Sirieix (UMR MOISA Montpellier SupAgro, Montpellier, France)
Sandrine Costa (UMR MOISA Montpellier SupAgro, Montpellier, France)
Laurence Depezay (Fondation Louis Bonduelle, Villeneuve d’Ascq, France)
Eloïse Castagna (Fondation Louis Bonduelle, Villeneuve d’Ascq, France)

European Journal of Marketing

ISSN: 0309-0566

Article publication date: 29 October 2018

Issue publication date: 27 November 2018

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Abstract

Purpose

This paper aims to explore consumers’ experienced life and studies how practices interconnect and are organized on a daily basis. The objective is to contribute to a better understanding of how (or whether) it is possible to interfere with daily practices, as public policies pretend to do, to address several societal challenges (food waste, healthy eating, greenhouse gas reduction, social equity, etc.).

Design/methodology/approach

Using the concepts of routine, ritual and practice to understand the dynamics of daily life from a practice theories perspective, this study is based on a qualitative methodology combining a projective method of collage coupled with semi-structured interviews with 23 participants and, participant observation of shopping, cooking and mealtimes at home with 11 of the 23 participants.

Findings

Results show that the degree of systematization of practices defines different types of routine according to various systematization factors (time, commitment, social relations, material), suggesting a distinction between systematized, hybrid and partially systematized routines. Beyond the question of the degree of systematization of practices composing routines, results show that some practices are embedded in daily routines due to their ritualization.

Research limitations/implications

This work takes part of the debates on how to study households’ daily life, and challenges the understanding of daily life activity more globally than just by the prism of isolated actions. For that, this study uses the concepts of routines and rituals. They are relevant to describe and to capture the tangle of practices composing food activities. The study shows that the material dimensions, the pressure of time, the commitments and the social relations condition the global arrangement of the food practices in a variable way.

Practical implications

Such results offer new perspectives for intervening on households’ daily consumption by understanding the global dynamics of food routines.

Originality/value

This work contributes to a better understanding of consumers’ food practices and routines and to a practice-change perspective considering constrained and routinely constructed lives.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

Erratum: It has come to the attention of the publisher that the article Margot Dyen, Lucie Sirieix, Sandrine Costa, Laurence Depezay, Eloïse Castagna, (2018) “Exploring the dynamics of food routines: a practice-based study to understand households’ daily life”, published in the European Journal of Marketing, https://doi.org/10.1108/EJM-10-2017-0775, was omitted from its intended special issue, “Families and Food: Marketing, Consuming and Managing”. This error was introduced in the editorial process and has now been corrected in the online version. The publisher sincerely apologises for this error and for any inconvenience caused. When citing the article, the citation should be given as Margot Dyen, Lucie Sirieix, Sandrine Costa, Laurence Depezay, Eloïse Castagna, (2018) “Exploring the dynamics of food routines: a practice-based study to understand households’ daily life”, European Journal of Marketing, Volume 52, issue 12, https://doi.org/10.1108/EJM-10-2017-0775.

Citation

Dyen, M., Sirieix, L., Costa, S., Depezay, L. and Castagna, E. (2018), "Exploring the dynamics of food routines: a practice-based study to understand households’ daily life", European Journal of Marketing, Vol. 52 No. 12, pp. 2544-2556. https://doi.org/10.1108/EJM-10-2017-0775

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2018, Emerald Publishing Limited

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