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English
Routledge
09 April 2024
This book provides an overview of recent and current research which defines and scopes the field of responsible marketing in one single edited book. It brings together diverse perspectives from contributors at Birmingham University, leading the academic development of knowledge of the subject, to contribute to the learning curriculum and reach out to those interested in improving marketing practices and standards. Responsible Marketing for Well-being and Society draws together a rich and diverse body of scholarly research from a variety of perspectives from individual to global, macro and micro, producer and consumer, environmental, stakeholder, supply chain, and other intermediary viewpoints. The embryonic research in this field involves different philosophical and methodological positions, theoretical approaches, and research communities including aspects of corporate social responsibility, marketing ethics, critical marketing, consumer culture theory, and macromarketing.

The book takes a predominantly organisational or enterprise-level perspective in order to understand and explain how individuals and organisations can manage their marketing activities and relationships responsibly. The actions of other stakeholders are also a crucial component in achieving responsible outcomes; therefore, a broader perspective on the impacts of marketing decisions and actions on other stakeholders, such as consumers, employees, the environment, and society, is also taken as a basis for analysis and discussion. The book provides an authoritative overview for the academic market, including university libraries, research teams, PhD students, and independent researchers.

The topics and contents of responsible marketing are relevant to several disciplinary fields of study including, marketing, advertising, retailing and other business subjects, consumer studies, sustainability, ethics, public policy, media studies, psychology, economics, and other social sciences.

Edited by:   , , , , , , , ,
Imprint:   Routledge
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 234mm,  Width: 156mm, 
Weight:   2.210kg
ISBN:   9781032487625
ISBN 10:   1032487623
Series:   Routledge Research Companions in Business and Economics
Pages:   440
Publication Date:  
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Primary
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Editors Contributors 1. Introduction: Responsible Marketing Michael Saren, Louise Hassan, Miriam McGowan, N. Craig Smith, Emma Surman, and Rohit Varman Section 1: Encouraging and Challenging Responsible Consumption 2. Environmentally sustainable spillover effects Megan Burnett 3. Experience of a self-control conflict: A key to unlock the exertion of self-control effort in sustainable consumption Ngoc T H Nguyen and Louise Hassan 4. Is it irresponsible to responsibly market alcohol?: The role of corporate social responsibility in the UK alcohol industry Isabelle Szmigin 5. Responsible marketing and consumption starts with changing mindsets: How educators can embed responsible marketing and consumption into curricula Sarah Montano and Inci Toral Manson Section 2: Promoting Marketing Care, Access and Diversity 6. Broken Promises: A day in the life of a carer Leighanne Higgins and Killian O’Leary 7. Film and the marketplace exclusion of aging female sexuality: A critical feminist review Julie Whiteman 8. Toward a broadened understanding of care, markets and consumption Andreas Chatzidakis 9. Swapping food and cultivating care at community food swaps Emma Surman Section 3: Marketing Responsibility and Technology 10. Responsible technology in marketing: Theory, adoption, practice Robert Cluley and William Green 11. Imagining responsible marketing in the digital economy: Why it is easier to think about AI overloads than digital marketing as a source of freedom Mike Molesworth, Iris Hong-Bich Truong and Georgiana Grigore 12. When responsibility fails: The case of Facebook/Meta’s response to the Cambridge Analytica data scandal Hazel Westwood 13. Responsible marketing in a time of culture war Ken Peattie Section 4: Marketing Ethics and Sustainability 14. On justification: Exploring the controversies and sensemaking of the ethical tourist Solon Magrizos 15. Ready meals’ and dinner meal deals’ contribution to overconsumption: Using social marketing and the intervention ladder models to examine actions Sheena Leek and Daniel Afoakwah 16. CSR halo and perceptions of company CSR programs Sofia López-Rodríguez, N. Craig Smith and Daniel Read 17. The need for responsible film marketing Finola Kerrigan Section 5: Critical Perspectives on Marketing and Society 18. Postcolonialism, subalternity, and critical marketing Rohit Varman 19. Identity-in-creation: Breaking the mould of identity projects Pilar Rojas-Gaviria 20. Regimes of visibility: Unravelling media, conflict, and hegemony in place branding processes Alessandro Gerosa 21. Double movement, sociality and resistance in markets Rohit Varman Section 6: Concluding Chapter 22. Striving to be and market a “responsible” business school Catherine Cassell, Caroline Moraes, and Emily Muscat-Sharp

Michael Saren is a Professor of Marketing at Birmingham Business School, University of Birmingham. He is also an Emeritus Professor at Leicester University, where he was head of the marketing division 2004–2014. He was previously a Professor of Marketing at Strathclyde University and an Honorary Professor at St Andrews University. He has been a member of the academic senate of the Chartered Institute of Marketing, the executive committee of EMAC, and was awarded an honorary fellowship and lifetime membership of the UK Academy of Marketing. Louise M. Hassan (蕭永真) is an Associate Professor in Marketing at Birmingham Business School. She was previously a Professor of Consumer Psychology at Bangor Business School (2015–2021). Her research interests focus on responsible consumption. In particular, she is interested in understanding psychological processes underlying consumption decisions. Miriam McGowan is a Lecturer in Marketing at the University of Birmingham. Her research draws on a consumer psychology perspective to understand consumer decision-making and the role of emotions. Miriam is interested in how peoples’ behaviours can be changed for good, such as by encouraging pro-social and pro-environmental choices. N. Craig Smith is the INSEAD Chaired Professor of Ethics and Social Responsibility at INSEAD in Fontainebleau, France, and Visiting Professor in Marketing at the University of Birmingham Business School. His research is at the intersection of business and society, encompassing business ethics, corporate social responsibility, and sustainability. Emma Surman is a Senior Lecturer/Associate Professor at the Birmingham Business School, University of Birmingham, UK. Her research falls broadly within the areas of consumer culture, critical marketing, sociology of consumption and ethics, and sustainability in relation to consumer practices. Rohit Varman is a Professor at Birmingham Business School, University of Birmingham. His current interdisciplinary research focuses on corporate violence, exploitation, modern slavery, and resistance to corporatisation and marketisation.

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