Abstract

Purpose While it is essential to further research the growing diversity in western metropolitan cities, little is currently known about how the members of various ethnic communities acculturate to multicultural societies. The purpose of this paper is to explore immigrants’ cosmopolitanism and acculturation strategies through an analysis of the food consumption behaviour of ethnic consumers in multicultural London. Design/methodology/approach The study was set within the socio-cultural context of London. A number of qualitative methods such as in-depth interviews, observation and photographs were used to assess consumers’ acculturation strategies in a multicultural environment and how that is influenced by consumer cosmopolitanism. Findings Ethnic consumers’ food consumption behaviour reflects their acculturation strategies, which can be classified into four groups: rebellion, rarefaction, resonance and refrainment. This classification demonstrates ethnic consumers’ multi-directional acculturation strategies, which are also determined by their level of cosmopolitanism. Research limitations/implications The taxonomy presented in this paper advances current acculturation scholarship by suggesting a multi-directional model for acculturation strategies as opposed to the existing uni-directional and bi-directional perspectives and explicates the role of consumer cosmopolitanism in consumer acculturation. The paper did not engage host communities and there is hence a need for future research on how and to what extent host communities are acculturated to the multicultural environment. Practical implications The findings have direct implications for the choice of standardisation vs adaptation as a marketing strategy within multicultural cities. Whilst the rebellion group are more likely to respond to standardisation, increasing adaptation of goods and service can ideally target members of the resistance and resonance groups and more fusion products should be exclusively earmarked for the resonance group. Originality/value The paper makes original contribution by introducing a multi-directional perspective to acculturation by delineating four-group taxonomy (rebellion, rarefaction, resonance and refrainment). This paper also presents a dynamic model that captures how consumer cosmopolitanism impinges upon the process and outcome of multi-directional acculturation strategies.

Highlights

  • Globalisation creates a heterogeneous and diverse composition of societies and multicultural markets (Neal et al, 2013; Beck, 2006; Cavusgil et al, 2005), as local, national and regional migration of people continues to change the demography and sociocultural texture of various societies

  • Our research aims to address this issue by linking consumer cosmopolitanism with acculturation in a multicultural environment

  • We report on our findings by segregating the two broader aspects of ethnic consumers’ views and interaction with the multicultural environment in London – their views of and interaction with traditional British culture in London; and their views of and interaction with global consumer culture and other ethnic sub-cultures

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Summary

Introduction

Globalisation creates a heterogeneous and diverse composition of societies and multicultural markets (Neal et al, 2013; Beck, 2006; Cavusgil et al, 2005), as local, national and regional migration of people continues to change the demography and sociocultural texture of various societies. The acculturation strategies of immigrants and sojourners are of interest to diaspora and cross-cultural marketing (Kumar and Steenkamp, 2013; Demangeot et al, 2015; Poulis et al, 2013; Schilke et al, 2009). 3m Londoners – over a third of London’s residents – were born outside the UK In addition to this significant number of first-generation immigrants and sojourners, London and other major western cities have many people who are born into immigrant families. They constitute the demographic diversity of today’s western metropolitan cities and make a significant contribution to socio-cultural and economic practices. In recent elections (e.g. Brexit, the US Presidential Election in 2016, the UK General Election in 2017), liberal left parties/ideologies gained more popularity in London, Liverpool, Manchester and Leeds and some major US cities than in the rural or semi-urban UK/USA, which may be related to the growing cosmopolitanism in western metropolitan cities

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