Benefit perceptions and their influence on the willingness to join community supported agriculture (CSA)

In this study, we focus on non-members’ benefit perception of Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) and their willingness to join. We look into how information impacts the perception of CSA benefits, their relevance, and how these benefits and other factors such as trust levels, subjective knowledge...

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Main Authors: Stefan Galley, Rita Saleh, Patrick Bottazzi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2025-06-01
Series:Cleaner and Responsible Consumption
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Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666784325000142
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author Stefan Galley
Rita Saleh
Patrick Bottazzi
author_facet Stefan Galley
Rita Saleh
Patrick Bottazzi
author_sort Stefan Galley
collection DOAJ
description In this study, we focus on non-members’ benefit perception of Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) and their willingness to join. We look into how information impacts the perception of CSA benefits, their relevance, and how these benefits and other factors such as trust levels, subjective knowledge, sustainable food shopping behaviour, political orientation and socio-demographics, influence the willingness to join. We conducted an online between-subject experiment. Respondents (N = 754) were divided in six groups, five groups were exposed to one benefit of CSA (i.e., either to the nutritional, sustainability, solidarity, transparency or community benefit) each, with the sixth group being the control group. Our experiment revealed that regardless of the information given, farmers were perceived to benefit the most from CSA, followed by society and lastly by the individual. However, all participants ranked individual benefits and environmental sustainability as most important for them, followed by solidarity with farmers, transparency and community aspects. Moreover, the results show that the more beneficial CSAs are seen, the higher the willingness to join. While information on benefits such as solidarity with farmers, nutritional quality and community are effective in reaching young, educated and often female members, nutritional benefits are addressing environmentally conscious and conservative consumers. Overall, information on nutrition and environmental sustainability led to the highest wilingness to join. By communicating primarily about the nutritional benefits and environmental sustainability of CSAs, and not only about altruistic benefits, a wider spread and integration of CSA could be achieved, ultimately fostering a sustainable food production and consumption mindset.
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spelling doaj-art-369be90109ee4573bc948fc100830ed42025-08-20T03:46:58ZengElsevierCleaner and Responsible Consumption2666-78432025-06-011710026310.1016/j.clrc.2025.100263Benefit perceptions and their influence on the willingness to join community supported agriculture (CSA)Stefan Galley0Rita Saleh1Patrick Bottazzi2Department of Socioeconomics, Agroscope Tänikon 1, 8356, Ettenhausen, Switzerland; Department of Sustainable Land Management, Institute of Geography, University of Bern, Hallerstrasse 12, 3012, Bern, Switzerland; Corresponding author. Department of Socioeconomics, Agroscope Tänikon 1, 8356, Ettenhausen, Switzerland.Department of Socioeconomics, Agroscope Tänikon 1, 8356, Ettenhausen, SwitzerlandDepartment of Sustainable Land Management, Institute of Geography, University of Bern, Hallerstrasse 12, 3012, Bern, SwitzerlandIn this study, we focus on non-members’ benefit perception of Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) and their willingness to join. We look into how information impacts the perception of CSA benefits, their relevance, and how these benefits and other factors such as trust levels, subjective knowledge, sustainable food shopping behaviour, political orientation and socio-demographics, influence the willingness to join. We conducted an online between-subject experiment. Respondents (N = 754) were divided in six groups, five groups were exposed to one benefit of CSA (i.e., either to the nutritional, sustainability, solidarity, transparency or community benefit) each, with the sixth group being the control group. Our experiment revealed that regardless of the information given, farmers were perceived to benefit the most from CSA, followed by society and lastly by the individual. However, all participants ranked individual benefits and environmental sustainability as most important for them, followed by solidarity with farmers, transparency and community aspects. Moreover, the results show that the more beneficial CSAs are seen, the higher the willingness to join. While information on benefits such as solidarity with farmers, nutritional quality and community are effective in reaching young, educated and often female members, nutritional benefits are addressing environmentally conscious and conservative consumers. Overall, information on nutrition and environmental sustainability led to the highest wilingness to join. By communicating primarily about the nutritional benefits and environmental sustainability of CSAs, and not only about altruistic benefits, a wider spread and integration of CSA could be achieved, ultimately fostering a sustainable food production and consumption mindset.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666784325000142Community supported agricultureWillingness to joinInformational effectBenefit perceptionsSwitzerland
spellingShingle Stefan Galley
Rita Saleh
Patrick Bottazzi
Benefit perceptions and their influence on the willingness to join community supported agriculture (CSA)
Cleaner and Responsible Consumption
Community supported agriculture
Willingness to join
Informational effect
Benefit perceptions
Switzerland
title Benefit perceptions and their influence on the willingness to join community supported agriculture (CSA)
title_full Benefit perceptions and their influence on the willingness to join community supported agriculture (CSA)
title_fullStr Benefit perceptions and their influence on the willingness to join community supported agriculture (CSA)
title_full_unstemmed Benefit perceptions and their influence on the willingness to join community supported agriculture (CSA)
title_short Benefit perceptions and their influence on the willingness to join community supported agriculture (CSA)
title_sort benefit perceptions and their influence on the willingness to join community supported agriculture csa
topic Community supported agriculture
Willingness to join
Informational effect
Benefit perceptions
Switzerland
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666784325000142
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