Labeling and information disclosure to support consumer choice are often proposed as attractive policy alternatives to onerous mandatory business regulation. This article argues that choices available to consumers are constructed and constrained by actors in the chains of production, distribution, and exchange who bring products to retail. It traces how “free-range” eggs come to market in Australia, finding that the “industrial free-range” label dominating the market is not substantially different from caged-egg production in the way that it addresses animal welfare, public health, and agro-ecological values. I show how the product choices available to consumers have been constructed not just by the regulation (or nonregulation) of marketin...
The main purpose of this study was to determine the structure of consumer preferences regarding info...
We conducted a labelled discrete choice experiment (DCE) to assess consumers’ preferences and willin...
Consumers sometimes prefer stricter food regulations as voters than as consumers. A prime example is...
In mid-2014, Australian consumer affairs ministers announced that they would together set 'a nationa...
In a neoliberal age governments, NGOs, food producers and retailers all state that the food system c...
This paper shows how the Australian egg industry maintained its preferred definition of “free range” ...
This paper investigates what "free-range" eggs are available for sale in supermarkets in Australia, ...
New Zealanders are among the highest egg consumers per capita in the world. Approximately 3.4 millio...
The highly concentrated nature of food retailing in Australia gives supermarkets considerable contro...
“Free range” and other higher welfare label claims are increasingly visible on Australian egg, pork ...
This article argues that the growth of free-range labelled egg and chicken shows that the public wis...
Recent public interest in so-called “ethical” food production, and in particular the welfare of inte...
The Australian egg industry is facing adjustment pressures including from animal welfare development...
[Extract] Consumer demand for animal products is at an all time high. This increased demand has led ...
BACKGROUND: One important way to transform food systems for human and planetary health would be to r...
The main purpose of this study was to determine the structure of consumer preferences regarding info...
We conducted a labelled discrete choice experiment (DCE) to assess consumers’ preferences and willin...
Consumers sometimes prefer stricter food regulations as voters than as consumers. A prime example is...
In mid-2014, Australian consumer affairs ministers announced that they would together set 'a nationa...
In a neoliberal age governments, NGOs, food producers and retailers all state that the food system c...
This paper shows how the Australian egg industry maintained its preferred definition of “free range” ...
This paper investigates what "free-range" eggs are available for sale in supermarkets in Australia, ...
New Zealanders are among the highest egg consumers per capita in the world. Approximately 3.4 millio...
The highly concentrated nature of food retailing in Australia gives supermarkets considerable contro...
“Free range” and other higher welfare label claims are increasingly visible on Australian egg, pork ...
This article argues that the growth of free-range labelled egg and chicken shows that the public wis...
Recent public interest in so-called “ethical” food production, and in particular the welfare of inte...
The Australian egg industry is facing adjustment pressures including from animal welfare development...
[Extract] Consumer demand for animal products is at an all time high. This increased demand has led ...
BACKGROUND: One important way to transform food systems for human and planetary health would be to r...
The main purpose of this study was to determine the structure of consumer preferences regarding info...
We conducted a labelled discrete choice experiment (DCE) to assess consumers’ preferences and willin...
Consumers sometimes prefer stricter food regulations as voters than as consumers. A prime example is...