Alexandra E. Lobb
University of Reading
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Featured researches published by Alexandra E. Lobb.
Appetite | 2007
Stephanie Chambers; Alexandra E. Lobb; Laurie T. Butler; Kate Harvey; W. Bruce Traill
The UK government is currently attempting to encourage consumers to buy more locally produced food. It is hoped that this will provide economic, environmental and social benefits to local areas, leading to more sustainable patterns of consumption. This qualitative study looks at the views and behaviour of consumers towards local foods with a particular focus on the barriers that prevent greater uptake of local produce. In total, four focus groups (n=33) were conducted. Content analysis identified six relevant themes in relation to local, national and imported foods. These were cost, lifestyle, food quality, consumer ethnocentrism, choice and farmers. Overall, although participants reported buying few local products currently, there was widespread enthusiasm across socio-economic groups for local foods, with participants perceiving them as being of a higher quality than imported foods. They also generally endorsed the idea of supporting local farmers and their own national economy. The main barriers preventing participants from buying more local products were price and inconvenience. The results are discussed in relation to developing future strategies for encouraging people to buy more local food products.
Food Economics - Acta Agriculturae Scandinavica, Section C | 2005
Alexandra E. Lobb
Consumers’ attitudes to trust and risk are key issues in food safety research and attention needs to be focused on clearly defining a framework for analysing consumer behaviour in these terms. In order to achieve this, a detailed review of the recent literature surrounding risk, trust and the relationship between the two must be conducted. This paper aims to collate the current social sciences literature in the fields of food safety, trust and risk. It provides an insight into the economic and other modelling procedures available to measure consumers’ attitudes to risk and trust in food safety and specifically notes the need for future research to concentrate on examining risk and trust as inter-related variables rather than two distinct, mutually exclusive concepts. A framework is proposed which it is hoped will assist in devising more effective research to support risk communication to consumers.
Food Economics - Acta Agriculturae Scandinavica, Section C | 2007
Alexandra E. Lobb; Mario Mazzocchi
Abstract It is becoming increasingly difficult for the public to attempt to assess risks using traditional methods such as smell, taste or other physical attributes of food. The existence of extrinsic cues such as the country of origin (COO) of food can help to make food purchase decisions easier for consumers. However, the use of extrinsic cues depends heavily on the extent to which consumers trust such signals to be indicative of quality or safety, which in turn depends on the credibility behind that cue. This paper aims to examine consumers association of domestically produced food with increased food safety standards and the association of COO and food safety information with socio-demographics and other aspects of consumer psychology such as attitudes, risk perception and trust. Using an ordered probit model, domestic production is examined as an extrinsic cue for food safety by looking at the relationship with trust in food safety information provided by national food standards agencies (NFSAs) and other socio-demographic characteristics, based on nationally representative data from 2725 face-to-face interviews across five European countries. Results suggest that domestic production of food is an extrinsic cue for food safety and as consumers place increasing importance on food safety they are more interested in food produced in their own country. This, coupled with consumer trust in a strong, and independent national food standards agency, suggests the potential exists for the increased consumption of domestically produced foods.
Applied Economics | 2006
Mario Mazzocchi; Davide Delle Monache; Alexandra E. Lobb
This paper exploits a structural time series approach to model the time pattern of multiple and resurgent food scares and their direct and cross-product impacts on consumer response. A structural time series Almost Ideal Demand System (STS-AIDS) is embedded in a vector error correction framework to allow for dynamic effects (VEC-STS-AIDS). Italian aggregate household data on meat demand is used to assess the time-varying impact of a resurgent BSE crisis (1996 and 2000) and the 1999 Dioxin crisis. The VEC-STS-AIDS model monitors the short-run impacts and performs satisfactorily in terms of residuals diagnostics, overcoming the major problems encountered by the customary vector error correction approach.
Journal of International Food & Agribusiness Marketing | 2010
Matthieu H. Arnoult; Alexandra E. Lobb; Richard Tiffin
We report results from an investigation into consumer preferences for locally produced foods. Using a choice experiment we estimate willingness to pay for foods of a designated origin together with certification for organic and free of genetically modified (GM) ingredients. Our results indicate that there is a preference for locally produced food that is GM free, organic, and produced in the traditional season.
Food Quality and Preference | 2007
Alexandra E. Lobb; Mario Mazzocchi; William Traill
Journal of Agricultural Economics | 2008
Mario Mazzocchi; Alexandra E. Lobb; W. Bruce Traill; Alessio Cavicchi
International Journal of Consumer Studies | 2008
Stephanie Chambers; Alexandra E. Lobb; Laurie T. Butler; W. Bruce Traill
Agribusiness | 2008
Gianluca Stefani; Alessio Cavicchi; Donato Romano; Alexandra E. Lobb
International Journal of Consumer Studies | 2010
Georgia Herbert; Laurie T. Butler; Orla B. Kennedy; Alexandra E. Lobb