PhD ceremony Jan Koch: Utterly disgusting! How the experience of disgust can both prevent and stimulate societal change
PhD ceremony: | Mr J.A. (Jan) Koch |
When: | October 21, 2021 |
Start: | 16:15 |
Supervisor: | prof. dr. ir. K. (Koert) van Ittersum |
Co-supervisor: | dr. J.W. (Jan Willem) Bolderdijk |
Where: | Academy building RUG |
Faculty: | Economics and Business |
Dissertation: |
![Front page Jan Koch's dissertation](/feb/news/2021/211103-phd-ceremony-jan-koch-front-page-dissertation.jpg)
Achieving a sustainable lifestyle is arguably humanity’s biggest challenge to date. While most consumers are aware of this situation, key issues remain unaffected. For instance, as a major driver of global CO2 emissions, the steadily rising consumption of meat fuels the pollution of air, water, and soil, and threatens biodiversity. Why is it so difficult for consumers to abandon current unsustainable behaviors, and adopt more sustainable behaviors instead? This dissertation examines how change may be promoted by introducing disgust as both an underrecognized barrier and key to behavior change. On the one hand, this dissertation shows that disgust can be a reason why consumers reject sustainable behaviors such as consuming sustainable food alternatives. Consumers, for instance, intuitively reject edible insects and lab-meat due to disgust. This disgust, I show, may not be the result of any of the foods’ inherent qualities like taste or texture, but may simply result from the perception that such foods deviate from what consumers have internalized to be the norm. If sustainable food alternatives were perceived to be more normal, consumers would no longer feel disgusted in response to these foods and consequently accept them.
Disgust can, on the other hand, also be used to make people refrain from unsustainable behavior. For instance, graphic warning labels can visually link the consumption of meat to its detrimental consequences and thereby make people reduce it. Importantly, previously voiced concerns that the use of graphic warning labels may stigmatize the target group were not supported by my research.
Last modified: | 25 January 2023 3.48 p.m. |
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