Natalie Pearson , Iain Davies , Peter Nuttall , Baris Yalabik
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Hospitality employees play a crucial role in food waste prevention, yet there is little understanding of how employees can influence the way food waste is thought about and dealt with within their workplace. To address this gap, we conducted semi-structured interviews with 23 UK hospitality actors, including frontline employees, managers and business owners to understand how they influence others, and have been influenced by others, to prevent food waste. We analyse the data through a sensemaking lens, which shows that food waste messages are received and made sense of instantly, or with delay due to exposure over time, or when the time is right. This reception process is active or passive, and congruent or incongruent, which has implications for whether food waste messages are understood as intended and the behavioural outcomes of the reception process. Developing a more comprehensive understanding of how food waste messages are received, understood and enacted has implications for food waste communications and how hospitality actors can influence the way food waste is thought about and dealt with within their workplace.
期刊介绍:
The International Journal of Hospitality Management serves as a platform for discussing significant trends and advancements in various disciplines related to the hospitality industry. The publication covers a wide range of topics, including human resources management, consumer behavior and marketing, business forecasting and applied economics, operational management, strategic management, financial management, planning and design, information technology and e-commerce, training and development, technological developments, and national and international legislation.
In addition to covering these topics, the journal features research papers, state-of-the-art reviews, and analyses of business practices within the hospitality industry. It aims to provide readers with valuable insights and knowledge in order to advance research and improve practices in the field.
The journal is also indexed and abstracted in various databases, including the Journal of Travel Research, PIRA, Academic Journal Guide, Documentation Touristique, Leisure, Recreation and Tourism Abstracts, Lodging and Restaurant Index, Scopus, CIRET, and the Social Sciences Citation Index. This ensures that the journal's content is widely accessible and discoverable by researchers and practitioners in the hospitality field.