An ethnographic study of people’s strategies to avoid food waste

Disturbing volumes of food waste generation around the world have been recently reported. The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO, 2011) estimate that one third of food is wasted or lost each year worldwide. It has also been reported that in developed countries about half of...

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Main Author: Reyes Cruz, Aurea Gisela
Format: Dissertation (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/39156/
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author Reyes Cruz, Aurea Gisela
author_facet Reyes Cruz, Aurea Gisela
author_sort Reyes Cruz, Aurea Gisela
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Disturbing volumes of food waste generation around the world have been recently reported. The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO, 2011) estimate that one third of food is wasted or lost each year worldwide. It has also been reported that in developed countries about half of food waste generated in a year comes from households (Quested & Parry, 2011). Although government policies and campaigns have been created to reduce these amounts, very little has been done to thoroughly understand the practices and activities that trigger the generation of food waste inside households, and the strategies that are presently used to avoid it. This study investigated such strategies through an ethnographic study of three different households conducted for three weeks, carrying out fieldwork combined with semi-structured and contextual interviews, diaries and instant messaging. Many strategies to avoid food waste were identified within ordinary activities related to food such as shopping, storing, preparing, cooking, eating and discarding. Important factors to accomplish such strategies, and possible areas to be supported by technology, were ascertained through analysis. A set of design requirements were generated informed by the study findings and ultimately a paper-based prototype of a mobile application was designed based on the requirements and evaluated. The results showed that there are commonalities among households influencing food waste and its avoidance, but at the same time exposed the need to design systems with flexibility, acknowledging that households may have different needs and different types of users. These are the factors designers and developers must take note of, because they are the key point to reduce food waste in households.
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spelling nottingham-391562017-10-19T17:36:34Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/39156/ An ethnographic study of people’s strategies to avoid food waste Reyes Cruz, Aurea Gisela Disturbing volumes of food waste generation around the world have been recently reported. The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO, 2011) estimate that one third of food is wasted or lost each year worldwide. It has also been reported that in developed countries about half of food waste generated in a year comes from households (Quested & Parry, 2011). Although government policies and campaigns have been created to reduce these amounts, very little has been done to thoroughly understand the practices and activities that trigger the generation of food waste inside households, and the strategies that are presently used to avoid it. This study investigated such strategies through an ethnographic study of three different households conducted for three weeks, carrying out fieldwork combined with semi-structured and contextual interviews, diaries and instant messaging. Many strategies to avoid food waste were identified within ordinary activities related to food such as shopping, storing, preparing, cooking, eating and discarding. Important factors to accomplish such strategies, and possible areas to be supported by technology, were ascertained through analysis. A set of design requirements were generated informed by the study findings and ultimately a paper-based prototype of a mobile application was designed based on the requirements and evaluated. The results showed that there are commonalities among households influencing food waste and its avoidance, but at the same time exposed the need to design systems with flexibility, acknowledging that households may have different needs and different types of users. These are the factors designers and developers must take note of, because they are the key point to reduce food waste in households. 2016-12-14 Dissertation (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/39156/1/Aurea%20Gisela%20Reyes%20Cruz%204258483.pdf Reyes Cruz, Aurea Gisela (2016) An ethnographic study of people’s strategies to avoid food waste. [Dissertation (University of Nottingham only)] Household food waste avoidance human-computer interaction sustainable HCI.
spellingShingle Household
food waste avoidance
human-computer interaction
sustainable HCI.
Reyes Cruz, Aurea Gisela
An ethnographic study of people’s strategies to avoid food waste
title An ethnographic study of people’s strategies to avoid food waste
title_full An ethnographic study of people’s strategies to avoid food waste
title_fullStr An ethnographic study of people’s strategies to avoid food waste
title_full_unstemmed An ethnographic study of people’s strategies to avoid food waste
title_short An ethnographic study of people’s strategies to avoid food waste
title_sort ethnographic study of people’s strategies to avoid food waste
topic Household
food waste avoidance
human-computer interaction
sustainable HCI.
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/39156/