ACCI Annual Conference 2015Sheraton Sand Key ResortClearwater Beach, FLMay 20‐22, 2015
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2015 Karpatkin Lecture ACCIClearwater Beach FL (May 20-22)
Reframing Perspectives for Consumer Work
Sue L. T. McGregor PhD Professor Emerita [email protected]
ACCI Annual Conference 2015Sheraton Sand Key ResortClearwater Beach, FLMay 20‐22, 2015
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Marketplace is profoundly complex
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Need to shift perspectives and reframe approaches to our consumer work
•
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Collection of new perspectives
• Consumer justice• Transformative consumer research• Consumer acumen• Moral leadership• Non-violent consumerism• Integral thinking• Transdisciplinarity• Complexity theory
ACCI Annual Conference 2015Sheraton Sand Key ResortClearwater Beach, FLMay 20‐22, 2015
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ACCI Annual Conference 2015Sheraton Sand Key ResortClearwater Beach, FLMay 20‐22, 2015
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Consumer justice• A new concept being used by Consumers
International and the Union des consommateurs (Quebec), since 2011.
• Consumer protection and access to justice have been historically linked but the term consumer justice seems different somehow, a subtle reframing of our work.
• New jargon- Tackling injustice in the consumer marketplace so as to strengthen consumer rights
• What does the noun justice mean when linked with the adjective consumer?
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Consumer justice con’t• Is consumer justice different from consumer rights?▫ Rights are something we are entitled to, something we deserve.
Justice pertains to morally right and fair actions. Justice is Latin iusfor “right.”
• Would our work look different if we strove for consumer justice, not just access to justice?
• Is consumer injustice a more powerful perspective than infringement or abuse of consumer rights? ▫ If people experience an injustice, they experience a violation of a
right against their reasonable will – a wrong against them, another species, the earth, or a wrong against society or humanity. If someone experiences injustice, they endure an outcome that they did not deserve.
▫ To infringe means to encroach on something, to go beyond the usual limit (people can feel violated, threatened, dismissed, disrespected).
▫ Abuse of means maltreatment, misuse, exploitation, manipulation.
ACCI Annual Conference 2015Sheraton Sand Key ResortClearwater Beach, FLMay 20‐22, 2015
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Consumer justice fini
• Does an injustice have to occur before a consumer right can be infringed upon or abused?
• Justice scholars also maintain that a sense of injustice leads to action while the notion of justice inspires contemplation …
• Would our consumer work change if we shifted to a concern for the sense of consumer injustice instead of consumer justice or consumer rights?
ACCI Annual Conference 2015Sheraton Sand Key ResortClearwater Beach, FLMay 20‐22, 2015
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Source of image:http://www.acrwebsite.org/assets/images/tcr/tc
r-graphics.GIF
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TRC is promoted by the Association for Consumer Research (ACR), since 2006
• It is a movement within ACR that seeks to encourage, support, and publicize research that benefits consumer welfare and quality of life for all beings affected by consumption across the world.▫ It is a push back to the fallout of neoliberalism, capitalism,
top-down globalization, conservatism, fundamentalism, consumerism, and materialism.
• TCR is focused on improving the well-being of consumers while maximizing social justice and the fair allocation of opportunities and resources.
• TCR assumes that the life world of the consumer must be kept in clear focus so that research can maximize its meaningfulness, relevance, and usefulness.
ACCI Annual Conference 2015Sheraton Sand Key ResortClearwater Beach, FLMay 20‐22, 2015
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Nuances of TCR:• deeply values the plurality of theories, world views,
methodologies, methods, levels of analysis, and paradigm (it privileges none)
• seeks to work on those problems that are perceived by consumers to be most pressing, to better ensure that our research is meaningful and relevant
• is inherently focused on context• intentionally shares research findings with
consumers, policy makers and others; TCR researchers see themselves in the role of public servant
• especially strives to make sure research results are pertinent and intelligible to consumers
• is especially focused on a new concept called practical consumer wisdom
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TCR’s practical consumer wisdom
• Resisting the pursuit of empirical knowledge in the absence of deliberation and dialogue about society’s needs and pressures, TCR seeks practical wisdom, which stems from Aristotle’s notion of phronesis▫ Greek word for a type of wisdom or intelligence,
specifically the virtue of practical thought (think before you act)
• Practical wisdom is defined as developing plans and solutions that are well reasoned and capable of action in regard to matters that are good or bad for humanity (human and earthly welfare)
• Being a wise consumer is more than cost-benefit analysis or knowing one’s preferences. It is about perceptive, context-specific judgements with a mission to maintaining and enhancing well-being
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TCR holds dialogical conferences• Deeply listen to and
engage with others on shared concerns that impact consumer well-being and quality of life
• Create strong social networks of consumer researchers who share practical wisdom and seek to translate research into action for social change
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ACCI Annual Conference 2015Sheraton Sand Key ResortClearwater Beach, FLMay 20‐22, 2015
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Acumen (mental sharpness, shrewdness) is aligned with TCR’s practical wisdom
• Assumes that in times of complexity, consumer literacy is insufficient – consumers need acumen; that is, keen insight, good judgements and ability to make quick decisions in very complex situations.
• With acumen, people are able to penetrate deeply into ideas, enabling them to discern the dynamics of changing contexts.
• Acumen means sharp minds and intellectual wit(i.e., the capacity for inventive thought and for quick understandings)
• Penetrating intelligence better enables consumers to ensure their well-being and quality of life, while being aware of social justice, ecological integrity, and the moral and ethical dimensions of their behaviour.
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New Assumptions:• With sensitization and education, consumers can
become capable of recognizing the complexity of the marketplace and of their life world.
• Consumers are able to penetrate this maze of connections, discerning the power, privilege and dynamics at play. The latter have the ability to compromise their consumer interest, putting them at a disadvantage.
• Their and our actions would be directed at the complex nuances of the system as it plays out in people’s daily lives, keenly seeking opportunities to enhance the consumers’ interest in the context of deep and emergent complexity.
ACCI Annual Conference 2015Sheraton Sand Key ResortClearwater Beach, FLMay 20‐22, 2015
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ACCI Annual Conference 2015Sheraton Sand Key ResortClearwater Beach, FLMay 20‐22, 2015
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Consumers have always been conceptualized as managers – this could be reframed
Leaders Managers
• provide direction for transformation based on principles
• adapt to situations, striving to share power while strengthening people.
• work on changing the system and the infrastructures by looking at the lens and saying it is right for us.
• provide control of resources used in transactions based on methods and procedures
• react to situations, striving to maintain power while minimizing costs and maximizing benefits.
• work within the system and structures by looking through the lens, directing the producers to do the work.
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Moral leadership• In addition to the management
imperative of sustainability, ethics, and environmental integrity, the field needs a moral leadership imperative.
• Consumers can be viewed as moral leaders in the marketplace as well as efficient, ethical managers.▫ When people 'think ethically,' they are
giving at least some thought to something beyond themselves (ethics refers to the goodness and badness of people and what it means to live the good life). Morality focuses on the right and wrong of people’s actions (guided by a personal compass derived from one’s conscience).
ACCI Annual Conference 2015Sheraton Sand Key ResortClearwater Beach, FLMay 20‐22, 2015
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Dimensions of consumer moral leadership
• I suggest that this concept comprises 12 different dimensions, including but not limited to ▫ moral authority and
discipline▫ moral self-transcendence▫ moral courage▫ moral authenticity, and▫ moral intensity.
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Consumer morality can be concerned with three things, each determining our approach to research:
• Character of the consumer (virtues) ▫ note that TCR’s phronesis (practical wisdom) is part of this
• Intentions and motives of the consumer• Consequences to others of the consumer’s actions
• Consumer moral leadership involves self-transcendent individuals acting from a stance of moral integrity and courage as they engage with morally intense consumer decisions (people could be harmed).
• This new concept helps us reframe consumers as moral leaders in the complex global marketplace in concert with ethical managers in their local and micro contexts.
ACCI Annual Conference 2015Sheraton Sand Key ResortClearwater Beach, FLMay 20‐22, 2015
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ACCI Annual Conference 2015Sheraton Sand Key ResortClearwater Beach, FLMay 20‐22, 2015
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What would our consumer work look like if we applied the principles of non-violence?
• Gandhian non-violence is understood to be a positive force generated by self-sacrifice in the cause of theTruth
• Need non-violence in order to cope with the structural violence inherent in the global marketplace; that is,
• when people consume, they often harm themselves, others, other species, and the earth, but this harm is virtually unintentional. It happens because of the way the marketplace is structured.
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Positive Force (Satyagraha)• the positive force refers to an
inner force not a physical force. • As people face and overcome inner
struggles and obstacles in life, they gain an inner power and strength that they can store up and draw upon when they encounter conflict.
• As people learn to control their knee-jerk, negative emotions and internalize new insights about themselves and others, they learn to store the energy involved in this process.
• This inner power is called Satyagraha (satya means truth).
Source of imageSource
http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_uISeCrSwfp0/TJNhC1xToZI/AAAAAAAAAFI/23dj4Fsxmrk/s1600/junglewomanhologram3.jpg
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Self-sacrifice• means a willingness to always
engage in inner struggles to learn more about oneself and to harness the positive force this self-reflection generates for future constructive use.
• A reserve of positive energy, self truth, the Satyagraha, builds up.
• Self-sacrifice takes great courage and many years to learn; it is a life journey.
• Also, sacrifice of self is infinitely superior to sacrifice of others; the intent of sacrificing oneself is to convert the hearts of violent opponents.
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The Truth• Because everyone sees the world
differently, they observe a different truth, meaning Gandhian truth is incomplete.
• People listen to and observe everyone, even those they do not like, because that person or situation may have the missing piece of Truth.
• Satyagraha (truth) builds up as people observe the world around them while looking for the Truth.
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Offering the Satyagraha When people who embrace this philosophy encounter a conflict, they draw upon their inner stockpile of positive strength, and take non-violent action (called offering the Satyagraha).
While never compromising the principles of non-violence, people practicing non-violence do remain open to changing strategies. Examples include strikes, boycotts, picketing, marches, sit-ins, and work-to-rule.
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Examples of non-violent consumerism
• When observing others consuming in the violent infrastructure, people could raise the issue of the impact of their violent consuming actions, but never judge the ethics or morals of the person.
• Northern consumers could try to see Majority World labourers as their friends who need to be liberated from oppression; rather than calling them others, try calling them fellow citizens.
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More examples of non-violent consumerism• Try not to say the transnational corporation;
instead, say the people in the transnational corporation, thereby humanizing the situation.
• Northern consumers could strive to work with the people in trans-national corporations (rather than calling them the enemy) so all can grow inside and move ahead together - everyone has a piece of the Truth and all are needed in order to find the Truth.
• People could take issue with the neo-liberal agendaand not with the CEOs who live by its principles-strive to reveal the truths behind the ideology, the agenda. Try to see the CEO as a person in need of liberation from oppression of the ideology.
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ACCI Annual Conference 2015Sheraton Sand Key ResortClearwater Beach, FLMay 20‐22, 2015
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Quadrant 1
Upper leftI
Inner self, consciousness, morality and ethics
Mind
Quadrant 2
Upper rightIT
External physical body and brain; biological organism; behaviour;
empirical knowingMatter
Quadrant 3
Lower leftWE
Culture, societies, values and world view (inside
the collective)
Meaning
Quadrant 4Lower right
ITS
External world's complex systems, institutions and
environments (outside the collective)
Web of Life
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Integral thinking• Consumer scholars need all
quadrants to solve the complex, emergent problems manifesting in the marketplace;
• otherwise, we miss too much. • Bringing all four quadrants to
consumer research better ensures a truer representation of existing global marketplace complexities.
• This approach allows us to totally reframe our consumer work; no longer just focused on scientific, materialistic, empirical research (upper right quadrant).
• It enables us to include the subjective and objective, interior and exterior, individual and collective, physical matter and external systems
Source of image http://www.barrypatterson.com/wp-
content/uploads/2011/12/AQALSust.jpg
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Source of imagehttp://www.hent.org/transdiscipli
nary.htm
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More complexity….• The problems of the world are too
complex to be solved using just knowledge from university disciplines. We need to connect that knowledge with other ways of seeing the world, outside the academy.Transdiscipline means across, to cross over, through, on the other side of, to go beyond.
• I propose that consumer researchers can draw upon Basarab Nicolescu’s transdisciplinary methodology,with its three axioms (ontology, logic and epistemology).
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Epistemology Ontology Logic
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•
Lava Lamp Metaphor
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Consumer researchers could embrace complexity thinking, which assumes:
• a system can comprise living parts (agents) that are intelligent and capable of adapting to their environment through interactions, communication, and coordinated activities.
• The system within which these agents interact is called an intelligent complex, adaptive system (CAS).
• Agents in the system interact and connect with each other in unpredictable and unplanned ways.
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Examples of complex adaptive systems include: • the ecosystem • the brain• the human immune system• the stock market • political parties• ant colonies• communities• economic systems
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Complexity thinking assumes:• The overall behaviour of the complex adaptive
system is the result of a huge number of decisions made every moment by many loosely coupled individual agents acting on local information.
• From this mass of interactions (i.e., iterations), regularities emerge and start to form a pattern, which feeds back on “the system” and informs the interactions of the agents.
• A period of flux occurs in all sectors in “the system” until a new balance is established (via adaptation and self (re)organization) .
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Complexity theory gives us a whole new set of principles to reframe our work:
• complexity • change and evolution • adaptation• self-organization• emergence• nonequilibrium• chaos and tensions• patterns and networks• holistic, synergistic interconnections and relations
between individual and aggregate agents
ACCI Annual Conference 2015Sheraton Sand Key ResortClearwater Beach, FLMay 20‐22, 2015
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ACCI Annual Conference 2015Sheraton Sand Key ResortClearwater Beach, FLMay 20‐22, 2015
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And there are more!
Collection of new perspectives
• Consumer justice• Transformative consumer research• Consumer acumen• Moral leadership• Non-violent consumerism• Integral thinking• Transdisciplinarity• Complexity theory
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Common threads for reframing our consumer work:
• Complexity• Multiple perspectives and
realities• Multiple sectors and actors• Multiple truths• Transformation, transcendence
and dialogue• Beyond disciplines and
fragmentation• Inclusiveness• Wisdom and discerning
judgements• Non-violence • Moral leadership • Justice• Integral (holistic) thinking
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We would approach our consumer work with• a different set of assumptions,• different principles and concepts,• a different range of theories and
conceptual frameworks, and• a deeper respect for
transdisciplinary and transectoral collaboration.
• We would anticipate totally different results and processes, undertaken with a wider range of actors and sectors.
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Additional Resources
• McGregor Consulting Group website, section on research about transdisciplinarity
http://www.consultmcgregor.com/research.php?cid=8