The Tipping Point in the Status of Socially Responsible Consumer Behavior Research? A Bibliometric Analysis
Metadata
Show full item recordEditorial
MDPI
Materia
Socially responsible consumer behavior Sustainability Bibliometric analysis Co-word analysis
Date
2020-04Referencia bibliográfica
Nova-Reyes, A., Muñoz-Leiva, F., & Luque-Martínez, T. (2020). The Tipping Point in the Status of Socially Responsible Consumer Behavior Research? A Bibliometric Analysis. Sustainability, 12(8), 3141. [doi:10.3390/su12083141]
Sponsorship
The authors are grateful for the financial assistance provided via the ADEMAR research group (University of Granada) under the auspices of the Spanish National Research Programme (R+D+i Research Project ECO2017-88458-R).Abstract
Looking at the impact of society on the environment or, as we write this manuscript in the
midst of the COVID-19 crisis, the scenes of consumers hoarding products, we wonder if consumers
really do exhibit socially responsible consumer behaviors (SRCB). An initial literature review showed
that few studies have addressed this issue, which creates opportunities for the development of new
research lines. Furthermore, no study had examined the conceptual evolution or whether SRCB is a
developed or fragmented theme from an exhaustive compilation of all previous academic research.
To address the proposed research questions, we conducted a bibliometric analysis applied to a
corpus of manuscripts on SRCB indexed in the Web of Science (WoS) bibliographic database, from
its inception in 1991 up to 2019. Co-word analysis provided a structure of conceptual sub-domains
classified based on their density and centrality. In addition, thematic networks were extracted that
showed the important associations between the main issues that the SRCB community has addressed,
which enabled the authors to examine the subject’s intellectual structuring over almost three decades.
The findings showed that the research, over time, has focused most on corporate social responsibility
(CSR), this being a motor theme between 2013 and 2016. In general, SRCB has been a very fragmented
field of study, however in the last three years, it has developed into a distinct entity; in the past,
it was basically addressed through CSR. The most productive thematic areas during the last 30 years
have been: (a) Research into consumer attitude, (b) research on CSR, and (c) research on social and
sustainable consumption behavior. In response to calls for greater theoretical clarification of the SRCB
discipline, the authors providing experts and novices with a better understanding of the current state
of the art and suggest future research directions.