ARANGEBI, Ufuoma (2025). Socio-Cultural Context of Intergenerational Attitudes and Behaviours Towards Household Food Waste. Doctoral, Sheffield Hallam University. [Thesis]
Documents
37397:1266232
PDF
Arangebi_2026_PhD_Socio-culturalContext.pdf - Accepted Version
Restricted to Repository staff only until 19 March 2027.
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution Non-commercial No Derivatives.
Arangebi_2026_PhD_Socio-culturalContext.pdf - Accepted Version
Restricted to Repository staff only until 19 March 2027.
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution Non-commercial No Derivatives.
Download (5MB)
Abstract
Household food waste (HFW) has significant economic, social and environmental
implications and households are the largest contributors to annual total amount of food
waste generated globally. While existing studies have extensively examined the scale
and drivers of HFW, they have paid far less attention to understanding the attitudes
and behaviours that underpin HFW practices. Food socialisation research highlights
the family as the primary site for the transmission of food-related attitudes and
behaviours across generations, yet this perspective has been rarely applied to HFW.
Moreover, extant literature suggests that younger consumers tend to engage more in
waste-generating behaviours but offers little explanation for why this occurs. Taken
together, these gaps indicate that our understanding of how intergenerational and
sociocultural factors shape HFW attitudes and behaviours remains limited.
My thesis addresses these gaps by exploring parent to child intergenerational
transmission of food consumption related attitudes and behaviours within two different
cultural contexts. Using an interpretive approach, semi-structured interviews were
conducted with 16 parent-adult child dyads consisting of white British and black
Nigerian and Nigerian immigrant participants responsible for the work of feeding their
families. Using a combination of socialisation theory and Bronfenbrenner’s
ecosystems framework, my findings show that the HFW attitudes and behaviours of
the adult children participants were shaped by the complex interaction between
sociocultural forces exerting varying levels of influence in the wider environment and
parental intergenerational influence which reflected either a continuation, modification
or discontinuation of attitudes and behaviours. Continuities reflected a commitment to
similar parental orientations while modified behaviours emerged due to differences in
implementation approaches. Discontinuities arose due to either an outright rejection
of parental influence or the non-translation of transmitted attitudes to behaviours in
response to contextual constraints like infrastructural barriers, special dietary needs
and changes in the food environment. This confirmed the dynamic and contextual
nature of intergenerational transmission. These findings advance understanding of
the dynamics of parent and adult child socialisation in the food domain by
demonstrating the heterogeneity of the familial socialisation process and offering a
more nuanced perspective of how food consumption related attitudes and behaviours
are learned and evolve. By situating HFW attitudes and behaviours within
intergenerational and sociocultural contexts, my thesis contributes to a more holistic
understanding of HFW.
More Information
Metrics
Altmetric Badge
Dimensions Badge
Share
Actions (login required)
![]() |
View Item |


Tools
Tools