Ethnographic Research on Reusable Packaging, 2023-24

DOI

This research draws on observation and interview-based data and packaging diaries, gathered between May 2023 and February 2024. The research focused on consumer engagement with reusable packaging systems and was conducted for the BUDDIE-PACK project in Work Package 2. The objective was to provide insight into how consumers interact with existing reusable packaging systems, to help project partners understand more about the drivers of and barriers to its adoption. Specifically, the research aimed to: (i) Explore what qualities of reusable packaging influence consumer acceptance of reuse systems in contexts such as shopping for groceries, household goods, personal care products and convenience foods. (ii) Explore how reusable packaging transforms shopping practices and associated activities such as planning, transporting, eating, cooking, and cleaning, and the barriers to and enablers of mainstreaming reuse. (iii) Investigate the visibility and useability of reusable packaging systems in mainstream retail and hospitality environments. The dataset contains: (i) interview transcripts from packaging interviews, accompanied shops, unboxing and online shopping tasks with a sample of 15 UK consumers; (ii) packaging diaries from the same 15 consumers, including text, packaging photos, videos and audio files; (ii) observational field notes and a focus group transcript from ethnographic research on supermarket and takeaway reuse schemes.BUDDIE-PACK, funded by the Horizon Europe programme, is coordinated by the Industrial Technical Centre for Plastics and Composites (IPC) and brings together 19 partners from 6 different European countries. This circular economy project is aiming at implementing a systemic approach for the large-scale deployment of reusable plastic packaging based on a multidisciplinary approach combining social, technological and economic innovations. Work Package 2 focuses on social and behavioural innovation for reusable plastic packaging, seeking to draw lessons about the drivers and barriers to consumer acceptance. This dataset, from Task 2.1, is based on social research on consumer engagement with existing reusable packaging systems.

The methodology consisted of: (i) Packaging and task-based semi-structured interviews with consumers, which focussed on activities such as shopping and unpacking. (ii) Packaging diaries, in which participants were asked to document and reflect on packaging use over the course of a typical week, over WhatsApp or Email. (ii) Ethnographic observations, field note taking and semi-structured 'ethnographic chats' with staff and customers in supermarkets, cafes and takeaway businesses trialling reusable packaging systems. (iv) A focus group with users of a reusable takeaway packaging scheme.

Identifier
DOI https://doi.org/10.5255/UKDA-SN-857346
Metadata Access https://datacatalogue.cessda.eu/oai-pmh/v0/oai?verb=GetRecord&metadataPrefix=oai_ddi25&identifier=fd23e35c02b73c67d71e9c0fb611ebc409f5d71db9b1c21b227b193097b564c3
Provenance
Creator Diprose, K, University of Sheffield
Publisher UK Data Service
Publication Year 2024
Funding Reference European Union
Rights Kristina Diprose, University of Sheffield; The Data Collection is available for download to users registered with the UK Data Service.
OpenAccess true
Representation
Resource Type Text; Still image; Audio; Video
Discipline Social Sciences
Spatial Coverage United Kingdom