The impact of moral philosophy and moral intensity on purchase behavior toward sustainable textile and apparel products

Abstract This study investigated the causal–effect relationships among moral philosophy, moral intensity, and purchase behavior toward environmentally sustainable textile and apparel products. A research model incorporating two dimensions of moral philosophy (i.e., idealism and relativism), five dim...

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Main Authors: Heesook Hong, Ji Hye Kang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2019-05-01
Series:Fashion and Textiles
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40691-019-0170-8
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spelling doaj-cbb19c6026eb43a59468b7d375f061d32020-11-25T02:59:10ZengSpringerOpenFashion and Textiles2198-08022019-05-016112210.1186/s40691-019-0170-8The impact of moral philosophy and moral intensity on purchase behavior toward sustainable textile and apparel productsHeesook Hong0Ji Hye Kang1Professor, Department of Fashion and Textiles, Jeju National UniversityAssistant Professor, Department of Textiles, Fashion Merchandising and Design, The University of Rhode IslandAbstract This study investigated the causal–effect relationships among moral philosophy, moral intensity, and purchase behavior toward environmentally sustainable textile and apparel products. A research model incorporating two dimensions of moral philosophy (i.e., idealism and relativism), five dimensions of moral intensity (i.e., magnitude, probability, temporal immediacy, proximity, and social consensus), and purchase behavior toward sustainable textile and apparel products was tested using consumer data collected from a wide age range of Korean females through online surveys. Organic and naturally dyed textile and apparel products were selected as focal interests of this study due to the significance of the two product markets in Korea. The results revealed that, of the two dimensions of moral philosophy, only idealism had a significant impact on overall moral intensity and moral intensity had a significant impact on consumer purchase behavior toward sustainable textile and apparel products, which confirmed the sequential relationship among the variables. As the first attempt, to our knowledge, to apply an ethical view to environmentally sustainable textile and apparel product consumption, this research contributes to a deeper understanding of the determinants of sustainable textile and apparel consumption among Korean consumers and the development of effective marketing communication strategies targeting Korean consumers.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40691-019-0170-8Moral philosophyMoral intensityPurchase behaviorSustainabilityOrganic productsNaturally dyed products
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Heesook Hong
Ji Hye Kang
spellingShingle Heesook Hong
Ji Hye Kang
The impact of moral philosophy and moral intensity on purchase behavior toward sustainable textile and apparel products
Fashion and Textiles
Moral philosophy
Moral intensity
Purchase behavior
Sustainability
Organic products
Naturally dyed products
author_facet Heesook Hong
Ji Hye Kang
author_sort Heesook Hong
title The impact of moral philosophy and moral intensity on purchase behavior toward sustainable textile and apparel products
title_short The impact of moral philosophy and moral intensity on purchase behavior toward sustainable textile and apparel products
title_full The impact of moral philosophy and moral intensity on purchase behavior toward sustainable textile and apparel products
title_fullStr The impact of moral philosophy and moral intensity on purchase behavior toward sustainable textile and apparel products
title_full_unstemmed The impact of moral philosophy and moral intensity on purchase behavior toward sustainable textile and apparel products
title_sort impact of moral philosophy and moral intensity on purchase behavior toward sustainable textile and apparel products
publisher SpringerOpen
series Fashion and Textiles
issn 2198-0802
publishDate 2019-05-01
description Abstract This study investigated the causal–effect relationships among moral philosophy, moral intensity, and purchase behavior toward environmentally sustainable textile and apparel products. A research model incorporating two dimensions of moral philosophy (i.e., idealism and relativism), five dimensions of moral intensity (i.e., magnitude, probability, temporal immediacy, proximity, and social consensus), and purchase behavior toward sustainable textile and apparel products was tested using consumer data collected from a wide age range of Korean females through online surveys. Organic and naturally dyed textile and apparel products were selected as focal interests of this study due to the significance of the two product markets in Korea. The results revealed that, of the two dimensions of moral philosophy, only idealism had a significant impact on overall moral intensity and moral intensity had a significant impact on consumer purchase behavior toward sustainable textile and apparel products, which confirmed the sequential relationship among the variables. As the first attempt, to our knowledge, to apply an ethical view to environmentally sustainable textile and apparel product consumption, this research contributes to a deeper understanding of the determinants of sustainable textile and apparel consumption among Korean consumers and the development of effective marketing communication strategies targeting Korean consumers.
topic Moral philosophy
Moral intensity
Purchase behavior
Sustainability
Organic products
Naturally dyed products
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40691-019-0170-8
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