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17 pages, 6174 KB  
Article
Tracking Change in Rock Art Vocabularies and Styles at Marapikurrinya (Port Hedland, Northwest Australia)
by Sam Harper
Arts 2025, 14(5), 123; https://doi.org/10.3390/arts14050123 (registering DOI) - 11 Oct 2025
Abstract
Track engravings dominate the rock art assemblage across Marapikurrinya (Port Hedland) in Northwest Australia, with social change through time linked to changes in how and when this graphic vocabulary is employed. Discrete styles have been identified within the broader engraving body, which is [...] Read more.
Track engravings dominate the rock art assemblage across Marapikurrinya (Port Hedland) in Northwest Australia, with social change through time linked to changes in how and when this graphic vocabulary is employed. Discrete styles have been identified within the broader engraving body, which is argued to have been produced semi-continuously over the last 7000 years, from the point of sea-level stabilisation in this region. It is proposed that changes in these styles reflect and negotiate environmental, demographic, and social changes. In the most recent stylistic phases, track motifs dominate, and it is argued to reflect change in marking strategy, from localised territorial bounded art to regional social harmonisation. This paper explores the potential functions of track motifs as a vocabulary distinct from other figurative art, using Marapikurrinya as a case study. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advances in Rock Art Studies)
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28 pages, 348 KB  
Article
Transmission and Transformation of Religion Among Muslims in Canada and West Germany
by Alyshea Cummins and Linda Hennig
Religions 2025, 16(10), 1293; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16101293 (registering DOI) - 11 Oct 2025
Abstract
In many countries across the Western world, religion is in decline, with public secular environments increasingly outweighing family-based religious socialization. Canada and West Germany exemplify this trend, where younger generations often perceive religion as something to be justified within predominantly nonreligious peer groups. [...] Read more.
In many countries across the Western world, religion is in decline, with public secular environments increasingly outweighing family-based religious socialization. Canada and West Germany exemplify this trend, where younger generations often perceive religion as something to be justified within predominantly nonreligious peer groups. Muslims, as a religious minority, display greater resilience to secularization, yet their religiosity is also subject to transformation. Drawing on narrative family interviews spanning two to three generations, this study examines the conditions shaping religious continuity and discontinuity within Muslim families in Canada and West Germany. Focusing on second- and third-generation Muslims, we find that practicing religion with children is the most significant factor in successful transmission, especially when rituals are woven into daily life. Yet family practice alone is insufficient: embedding children in faith-based community networks and fostering open dialogue about religion prove crucial for sustaining confidence, belonging, and adaptability. Religious transmission also intersects with ethnic and cultural identity, though ethnic ties alone do not guarantee continuity. Ultimately, we observe that transmission involves transformation: parents are changing the way they approach religion, placing a greater emphasis on their children making their own choices. Muslim families, like other faith communities, shift toward more individualized and reflective forms of religiosity, negotiating their identities within secular and often critical societal contexts. Full article
10 pages, 228 KB  
Entry
Vibocracy and the Collapse of Shared Reality
by Jacqueline Fendt
Encyclopedia 2025, 5(4), 163; https://doi.org/10.3390/encyclopedia5040163 (registering DOI) - 11 Oct 2025
Definition
Vibocracy refers to societal conditions in which public life and decision-making are shaped by affective resonance, performative legitimacy, and unstable epistemic frames, often amplified by algorithmic media and neo-oral communication environments. Unlike wicked problems, which presuppose shared intelligibility, and post-truth politics, which emphasize [...] Read more.
Vibocracy refers to societal conditions in which public life and decision-making are shaped by affective resonance, performative legitimacy, and unstable epistemic frames, often amplified by algorithmic media and neo-oral communication environments. Unlike wicked problems, which presuppose shared intelligibility, and post-truth politics, which emphasize the erosion of factual authority, vibocracy designates contexts where problems themselves are enacted and sustained through affective circulation. Recent years have seen the emergence of societal challenges where public life and decision-making are shaped less by shared evidence and deliberative reasoning than by affective resonance and performative legitimacy. This entry introduces the concept of vibocracy to describe these conditions and distinguishes it from existing categories such as wicked problems and messes. The analysis is based on a conceptual synthesis of scholarship from planning, organizational studies, media theory, and political science, combined with illustrative examples from recent societal controversies. The main finding is that vibocratic problems resist not only solutions but stable framing itself, creating volatile, performative arenas where legitimacy is enacted rather than negotiated. The entry concludes by proposing vibocracy as a distinct conceptual lens for understanding emerging societal challenges and outlines methodological implications for researchers and practitioners. Full article
(This article belongs to the Collection Encyclopedia of Social Sciences)
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24 pages, 4488 KB  
Review
Advances in Facial Micro-Expression Detection and Recognition: A Comprehensive Review
by Tian Shuai, Seng Beng, Fatimah Binti Khalid and Rahmita Wirza Bt O. K. Rahmat
Information 2025, 16(10), 876; https://doi.org/10.3390/info16100876 - 9 Oct 2025
Viewed by 225
Abstract
Micro-expressions are facial movements with extremely short duration and small amplitude, which can reveal an individual’s potential true emotions and have important application value in public safety, medical diagnosis, psychotherapy and business negotiations. Since micro-expressions change rapidly and are difficult to detect, manual [...] Read more.
Micro-expressions are facial movements with extremely short duration and small amplitude, which can reveal an individual’s potential true emotions and have important application value in public safety, medical diagnosis, psychotherapy and business negotiations. Since micro-expressions change rapidly and are difficult to detect, manual recognition is a significant challenge, so the development of automatic recognition systems has become a research hotspot. This paper reviews the development history and research status of micro-expression recognition and systematically analyzes the two main branches of micro-expression analysis: micro-expression detection and micro-expression recognition. In terms of detection, the methods are divided into three categories based on time features, feature changes and deep features according to different feature extraction methods; in terms of recognition, traditional methods based on texture and optical flow features, as well as deep learning-based methods that have emerged in recent years, including motion unit, keyframe and transfer learning strategies, are summarized. This paper also summarizes commonly used micro-expression datasets and facial image preprocessing techniques and evaluates and compares mainstream methods through multiple experimental indicators. Although significant progress has been made in this field in recent years, it still faces challenges such as data scarcity, class imbalance and unstable recognition accuracy. Future research can further combine multimodal emotional information, enhance data generalization capabilities, and optimize deep network structures to promote the widespread application of micro-expression recognition in practical scenarios. Full article
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27 pages, 1121 KB  
Article
Promoting Women’s Economic Empowerment Through Economic Diplomacy: The Case of the Arab Gulf’s Free Trade Agreements
by Damyana Bakardzhieva and Sara Chehab
Economies 2025, 13(10), 290; https://doi.org/10.3390/economies13100290 - 6 Oct 2025
Viewed by 267
Abstract
This empirical qualitative research explores the texts of 14 free trade agreements (FTAs) concluded by Arab Gulf countries individually or as block. The objective is to evaluate if these documents are gender-responsive using an internationally recognised framework that qualitatively measures if the agreements [...] Read more.
This empirical qualitative research explores the texts of 14 free trade agreements (FTAs) concluded by Arab Gulf countries individually or as block. The objective is to evaluate if these documents are gender-responsive using an internationally recognised framework that qualitatively measures if the agreements are used effectively as a tool to economically empower women. We find that although most of the agreements contain some gender provisions, gender mainstreaming remains limited to encouraging women-owned and women-led small and medium enterprises. This makes them at best limitedly responsive to addressing the gender inequalities that women in export-engaged businesses face. The conclusion outlines the areas for potential improvements in the dozens of agreements currently negotiated by Gulf economic diplomats. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section International, Regional, and Transportation Economics)
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12 pages, 243 KB  
Article
“You Only Buy What You Love”: Understanding Impulse Buying Among College Students Through Values, Emotion, and Digital Immersion
by Yuanbo Qi
J. Theor. Appl. Electron. Commer. Res. 2025, 20(4), 271; https://doi.org/10.3390/jtaer20040271 - 3 Oct 2025
Viewed by 812
Abstract
Impulsive purchasing behavior among university students has gained increased attention in the context of digital consumption settings; however, much of the existing research is product-specific and quantitative, leaving the subjective nuances of this phenomenon underexplored. This study investigates how college students perceive and [...] Read more.
Impulsive purchasing behavior among university students has gained increased attention in the context of digital consumption settings; however, much of the existing research is product-specific and quantitative, leaving the subjective nuances of this phenomenon underexplored. This study investigates how college students perceive and explain their impulsive purchase behavior across various product categories and platforms, using qualitative data from focus groups (n = 72). By revealing the prevalence of key patterns—interest-aligned, emotional relief, hedonistic lifestyle, social influence, inquisitive reviewer, presentation appeal, and controlled purchase—this research uncovers the underlying identity-affirming practices, internal emotional negotiations, and external sociotechnical cues that shape such behavior. Ultimately, it reframes impulsive buying as a socially embedded, identity-driven act rather than an act of irrationality. These findings advance our understanding of consumer psychology by emphasizing the lived experiences and self-construction processes of young consumers navigating media-saturated, algorithmically curated purchasing environments. Full article
26 pages, 12028 KB  
Article
Negotiating Safety and Belonging: Children’s Experiences of Independent Mobility and Autonomy in Low-Income High-Density Neighborhoods
by Lee Ning, Noor Hashimah Hashim Lim and Mastura Adam
Soc. Sci. 2025, 14(10), 587; https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci14100587 - 2 Oct 2025
Viewed by 260
Abstract
Children’s neighborhood mobility has been widely examined through either independent movement or psychological autonomy, yet few studies consider how these dimensions intersect in the lived realities of low-income, high-density environments. This study explores how neighborhood conditions simultaneously constrain and enable children’s experiences of [...] Read more.
Children’s neighborhood mobility has been widely examined through either independent movement or psychological autonomy, yet few studies consider how these dimensions intersect in the lived realities of low-income, high-density environments. This study explores how neighborhood conditions simultaneously constrain and enable children’s experiences of mobility and autonomy, focusing on People’s Housing Project (PPR) estates in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Using a qualitative, child-centered approach, data were collected through child-led walks and mental mapping with 23 children aged 7–12. The child-led walks revealed everyday hazards that restricted children’s freedom of movement and heightened concerns for safety. Conversely, the mental maps highlighted intangible but significant attachments that fostered a sense of belonging, pride, and autonomy despite material deprivation. Together, these findings illustrate that children’s well-being depends not only on opportunities for independent mobility but also on affective and symbolic dimensions of autonomy embedded in their neighborhood environments. The study concludes that planning and housing policies must move beyond efficiency and density to address children’s rights to safe, supportive, and meaningful spaces that nurture both freedom of movement and autonomy in everyday life. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Childhood and Youth Studies)
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24 pages, 491 KB  
Article
Channel Power Structures and Environmental Efforts: Insights from Store and National Brand Interactions
by Yang Xiao, Yuxiao Liang and Nan Shen
Mathematics 2025, 13(19), 3141; https://doi.org/10.3390/math13193141 - 1 Oct 2025
Viewed by 140
Abstract
Sustainability concerns and rising consumer environmental awareness (CEA) have fundamentally reshaped competitive dynamics in modern supply chains. This study examines the influence of CEA on pricing and environmental effort competition between store brand (SB) and national brand (NB) products in a two-stage supply [...] Read more.
Sustainability concerns and rising consumer environmental awareness (CEA) have fundamentally reshaped competitive dynamics in modern supply chains. This study examines the influence of CEA on pricing and environmental effort competition between store brand (SB) and national brand (NB) products in a two-stage supply chain with one manufacturer and one retailer. We develop a mathematical model to evaluate strategic interactions under three power structures: Manufacturer Stackelberg (MS), Retailer Stackelberg (RS), and Vertical Nash (VN), considering two environmental investment scenarios: NB-only investment and bilateral SB-NB investment. Our findings indicate that (i) when only NB products invest environmentally, CEA increases environmental effort levels, wholesale prices, and retail prices for both brands, expanding total channel value rather than merely redistributing profits; (ii) CEA and channel competition on jointly determine optimal channel power structure, with MS dominating in differentiated markets with low CEA while RS yields superior outcomes under high competition and high CEA; (iii) retailers consistently achieve maximum profits under VN structure through balanced negotiation positions; and (iv) bilateral environmental investment causes price convergence across structures, shifting competitive focus from governance to operational excellence. By integrating environmental investment, channel power structure, and channel competition into a unified framework, this study offers managers practical decision tools for selecting optimal channel structures based on observable market conditions. Furthermore, it demonstrates how grocery retail chains and consumer goods manufacturers can transform environmental initiatives from compliance costs into value creation mechanisms that enhance both profitability and sustainability. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Intelligent Computing & Optimization)
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14 pages, 4145 KB  
Article
The Spatial Logic of Privacy: Uncovering Privacy Patterns in Shared Housing Environments
by Ana Moreira and Francisco Serdoura
Buildings 2025, 15(19), 3532; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15193532 - 1 Oct 2025
Viewed by 142
Abstract
In response to the growing relevance of shared housing models such as co-living and co-housing, this study investigates how spatial configuration affects the experience and negotiation of privacy in shared domestic environments. While privacy is often treated as a subjective or cultural concern, [...] Read more.
In response to the growing relevance of shared housing models such as co-living and co-housing, this study investigates how spatial configuration affects the experience and negotiation of privacy in shared domestic environments. While privacy is often treated as a subjective or cultural concern, this research adopts a spatial perspective to examine its morphological underpinnings. Using space syntax methods, the study analyses contemporary shared housing models, focusing on three shared housing developments in Barcelona. Through Visual Graph Analysis (VGA), spatial parameters, including integration, through vision, control, and controllability values, are applied to assess the degree of accessibility, visibility, and spatial separation within and between private and communal areas. The results reveal distinct configurational patterns that correlate with different privacy gradients, identifying how spatial arrangement enables or restricts autonomy and co-presence among residents. The study concludes that privacy in shared housing is not only a matter of design intention but is embedded in the spatial logic of dwelling morphology: exposed and controlled spaces provide less privacy but enhance sociability, while spatial elements such as boundaries and transitions play an important role in managing privacy gradation and degrees. These findings offer a framework for understanding and designing shared living environments that are better attuned to the complexities of everyday privacy needs. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Emerging Trends in Architecture, Urbanization, and Design)
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12 pages, 508 KB  
Article
Coping Together: A Qualitative Study Exploring the Work of Home Health Care Assistants in Ireland
by Suzanne Cullen-Smith, Aoibheann McKeown, Kevin McKenna and Oonagh M. Giggins
Geriatrics 2025, 10(5), 128; https://doi.org/10.3390/geriatrics10050128 - 30 Sep 2025
Viewed by 221
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Home healthcare assistants (HHCAs) play a vital role in supporting older adults to remain in their homes. Yet, this work is often performed under conditions of emotional strain, limited resources, and systemic undervaluation. This study answers the question, how do HHCAs [...] Read more.
Background/Objectives: Home healthcare assistants (HHCAs) play a vital role in supporting older adults to remain in their homes. Yet, this work is often performed under conditions of emotional strain, limited resources, and systemic undervaluation. This study answers the question, how do HHCAs cope with work-related stress? Methods: Undertaken during the COVID-19 pandemic, a period of heightened stress and mandated social distancing, online interviews were conducted with HHCAs (n = 10). Data were inductively analyzed and themes were identified. Results: It was found that amid experiences of fear, caregiver stress, grief, and exhaustion, HHCAs coped with resource, communication, and care challenges by relying on informal peer-managed communication systems with colleagues. Leveraging existing peer-support coping strategies, HHCAs negotiated caring for others while taking care of themselves alongside a care ecosystem under unprecedented strain. Conclusions: HHCAs are increasingly vital to front-line home health care amid global aging and a shift toward community-based services. Urgent organizational reform is needed to support their well-being, prevent stress, and avoid burnout. Research-informed sector-wide planning must ensure adequate resources to maintain high-quality home care in the face of rising demand and anticipated future health crises. Full article
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17 pages, 2670 KB  
Article
Circular Urban Metabolism in Action: The Design of the Promenade Nardal, Paris
by Claire Doussard, Vanessa Stassi, Pauline Detavernier and Yoeun Chung
Urban Sci. 2025, 9(10), 394; https://doi.org/10.3390/urbansci9100394 - 30 Sep 2025
Viewed by 373
Abstract
As urban areas exert profound pressures on the natural environment, driving significant resource consumption and waste production, designers need to rethink the way urban projects are being developed. Therefore, this article advances the operationalization of the Circular Urban Metabolism (CUM) framework by analyzing [...] Read more.
As urban areas exert profound pressures on the natural environment, driving significant resource consumption and waste production, designers need to rethink the way urban projects are being developed. Therefore, this article advances the operationalization of the Circular Urban Metabolism (CUM) framework by analyzing a design case study: the Promenade Nardal in Paris. While CUM integrates the systemic material flow analysis of Urban Metabolism with the restorative strategies of the Circular Economy, it remains limited in its spatial articulation and applicability at the scale of urban design. Through a mixed-methods approach combining Life Cycle Assessment, spatial analysis, and qualitative inquiry, the article compares two circular design strategies, associated with the reuse of paving stones and the recycling of glass to produce Misapor, with conventional alternatives. Results demonstrate that stone reuse reduced CO2 emissions, energy demand, and water use, while Misapor showed energy and water advantages but slightly higher CO2 emissions due to production and transport. Beyond quantitative metrics, the study reveals the distinct design efforts and institutional frictions induced by circular practices, especially reuse, which requires adaptive aesthetics, labor-intensive design, and negotiation with technical norms. By spatializing material flows and foregrounding design agency, the article refines CUM as a situated and scalable framework, highlighting the need for context-sensitive, materially differentiated strategies in circular urban design. Full article
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16 pages, 356 KB  
Article
Navigating Between Mission and Competitiveness: Catholic Higher Education in Korea
by Denis Kim
Religions 2025, 16(10), 1252; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16101252 - 29 Sep 2025
Viewed by 266
Abstract
This study examines the evolution and current challenges of Catholic Higher Education (CHE) in South Korea within the context of globalization and neoliberal educational reform. It explores how Korean Catholic universities balance their distinctive mission with intensifying pressures for competitiveness, external validation, and [...] Read more.
This study examines the evolution and current challenges of Catholic Higher Education (CHE) in South Korea within the context of globalization and neoliberal educational reform. It explores how Korean Catholic universities balance their distinctive mission with intensifying pressures for competitiveness, external validation, and adaptation to secular academic norms. Drawing on P. Boudieu’s field theory and H. Richard Niebuhr’s typology of Christian responses to culture, the analysis frames the ways institutions of Korean CHE navigate the sometimes contrary currents of their institutional aims—simultaneously striving for academic excellence and maintaining Catholic identity. Case studies of three major Korean Catholic universities illustrate how leadership and curricular programs reflect the ongoing negotiation between mission-driven imperatives and market demands. The paper contends that living within this tension is not a sign of deficiency. It can actually be a source of resilience and innovation. The Korean experience of CHE offers insights for Catholic universities facing similar dilemmas globally, suggesting that engaging proactively with the seemingly contrary paradoxical demands can sustain the integrity of mission while fostering adaptive capacity amid the rapidly changing landscape of higher education. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Global Catholicism)
34 pages, 1060 KB  
Article
The Dynamics of Russian Language Maintenance in the U.S.-Based Russophone Diaspora: Conflicted Heritage, Resilience, and Persistence
by Irina Dubinina, Izolda Savenkova, Angelina Rubina and Olesya Kisselev
Languages 2025, 10(10), 252; https://doi.org/10.3390/languages10100252 - 29 Sep 2025
Viewed by 598
Abstract
This study examines intergenerational transmission of Russian within the U.S. Russophone diaspora in the wake of Russia’s 2022 full-scale invasion of Ukraine. It addresses: (1) parents’ motivations and practices surrounding intergenerational language transmission; and (2) challenges faced by Russian-speaking families in today’s shifting [...] Read more.
This study examines intergenerational transmission of Russian within the U.S. Russophone diaspora in the wake of Russia’s 2022 full-scale invasion of Ukraine. It addresses: (1) parents’ motivations and practices surrounding intergenerational language transmission; and (2) challenges faced by Russian-speaking families in today’s shifting sociopolitical landscape. The study draws on semi-structured Zoom interviews with 16 Russian-speaking parents in the United States, each raising children aged 3–15 and representing four different immigration periods, from the early 1990s to 2022, following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Findings reveal that heritage language maintenance is shaped not only by linguistic choices, but also by political and ethical considerations. While all parents continue to view Russian as a source of identity, cultural capital, and familial cohesion, many also actively disassociate the language from its sociopolitical ties to the aggressor state. Shared aspirations for bilingualism are tempered by internal and external pressures, including children’s growing agency, family dynamics, challenges of immigrant life, and war-driven fractures within the diaspora. This study contributes to research on heritage language maintenance and family language policies by exploring how global geopolitical events are negotiated through intimate, everyday language practices in immigrant households. Full article
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19 pages, 227 KB  
Article
Endogamy and Religious Boundaries in a Transnational Context—The Case of Knanaya Christians in North America
by Sinu Rose
Religions 2025, 16(10), 1242; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16101242 - 28 Sep 2025
Viewed by 271
Abstract
The Knanaya Christians, also referred to as Thekkumbhagar or Southists, represent a distinct endogamous group within the wider community of Saint Thomas Christians of southern India. Their origins can be traced to the arrival of Jewish Christians led by Knai Thoma or Thomas [...] Read more.
The Knanaya Christians, also referred to as Thekkumbhagar or Southists, represent a distinct endogamous group within the wider community of Saint Thomas Christians of southern India. Their origins can be traced to the arrival of Jewish Christians led by Knai Thoma or Thomas of Cana, who migrated to the Malabar Coast from Persia in 345CE. Upon their arrival, they mingled with the established Christian population of the Malabar Coast, known as the Vadakkumbhagar or the Northists, whose roots extend back to the apostolic mission of Saint Thomas in the 1st century CE. However, the Knanaya Christians have successfully preserved their unique identity through the practice of endogamy, which keeps their bloodlines separate from those of the Vadakkumbhagar, while also maintaining a spiritual connection and liturgical continuity with the latter. Despite their matrimonial exclusivity, the Knanaya Christians have followed the same developmental path as the larger Thomas Christian community, sharing liturgical practices, enjoying similar privileges, facing the same challenges during the Portuguese era, experiencing divisions in the 17th century, and striving to preserve their identity. The migration of this endogamous community to other parts of the world since the mid-20th century, in similar lines with different groups of Thomas Christians, has posed challenges to their traditions and practices, especially endogamy. This paper explores how Knanaya Christians maintain and adapt their endogamous marriage traditions in transnational settings by focusing on how Knanaya religious authorities and lay members collectively negotiate these tensions—whether by reinforcing endogamy or adapting it in response to shifting realities in North American settings. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Religion, Mobility, and Transnational History)
15 pages, 265 KB  
Article
Non-Negotiable Trust, Emotional Localism: A Qualitative Hierarchy of Cues for Organic Food in an Emerging EU Market
by Petruţa Petcu and Ana-Maria Nicolau
Agriculture 2025, 15(19), 2023; https://doi.org/10.3390/agriculture15192023 - 26 Sep 2025
Viewed by 234
Abstract
Organic foods, functioning as credence goods in sustainable consumption, compel consumers to rely on extrinsic cues for quality evaluation. To address this challenge, this study employs a qualitative, phenomenological approach, conducting ten in-depth, semi-structured interviews with Romanian organic food consumers. The resulting data [...] Read more.
Organic foods, functioning as credence goods in sustainable consumption, compel consumers to rely on extrinsic cues for quality evaluation. To address this challenge, this study employs a qualitative, phenomenological approach, conducting ten in-depth, semi-structured interviews with Romanian organic food consumers. The resulting data were systematically analyzed through thematic analysis to uncover decision-making patterns. The findings reveal a sequential hierarchy in which credible transnational certification (the EU organic logo) serves as a non-negotiable gatekeeper of trust, followed by country of origin—particularly local—which functions as an emotional and heuristic differentiator signaling authenticity and freshness, while price acts as a pragmatic arbiter, mediating trade-offs between ideal preferences and budget constraints. Based on these findings, this study proposes the Trust–Emotion–Pragmatism model as a nuanced framework for understanding organic food choice, suggesting that local producers can enhance competitiveness by first establishing trust through certification, then leveraging the emotional appeal of local origin, and finally adopting effective pricing strategies. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Agricultural Economics, Policies and Rural Management)
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