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Article
Generation Z diners’ moral judgements of restaurant food waste in the United States: a qualitative inquiry
Journal of Sustainable Tourism
  • Yinghua Huang, San Jose State University
  • Emily Ma, University of Surrey
  • Tsu Hong Yen, San Jose State University
Publication Date
1-1-2022
Document Type
Article
DOI
10.1080/09669582.2022.2150861
Abstract

This study explores Gen Z diners’ perceptions of restaurant food waste generation and prevention, as well as their related moral decision-making. Drawing on the norm activation model and moral disengagement theory, a dual-route process model was developed to depict Gen Zers’ the moral judgement for wasting food or not at restaurants. Six online focus groups with Gen Z diners in the United States were conducted and thematic analysis was applied. The findings of this study identified multiple underlying psychological mechanisms (e.g., moral obligation activation vs. moral disengagement) for explaining Gen Z diners’ food waste behaviors. Situational factors, cultural factors, and restaurant-related factors all play a key role in the moral judgment process. The findings also revealed what Gen Z diners expect restaurants to do in order to address the food waste problem. This study provides valuable theoretical and managerial implications for tackling the food waste issue. The practical contribution of this study supports the restaurant industry to achieve the UN Sustainable Development Goal 12 “Responsible Consumption and Production”.

Keywords
  • food waste,
  • Gen Z,
  • moral disengagement,
  • norm activation,
  • responsible consumption,
  • restaurant
Citation Information
Yinghua Huang, Emily Ma and Tsu Hong Yen. "Generation Z diners’ moral judgements of restaurant food waste in the United States: a qualitative inquiry" Journal of Sustainable Tourism (2022)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/yinghua-huang/69/