The Relationship between Consumers' Level of Acculturation to the Global Consumer Culture and Perception of Different Types of Consumer Culture Positioning - An Investigation of the Beer Brands in TaiwanTools Chang, Jo-Heng (2007) The Relationship between Consumers' Level of Acculturation to the Global Consumer Culture and Perception of Different Types of Consumer Culture Positioning - An Investigation of the Beer Brands in Taiwan. [Dissertation (University of Nottingham only)] (Unpublished)
AbstractThis research is essentially concerned with the relationship between consumer acculturation to the global consumer culture (AGCC) and consumer culture positioning. These two constructs are both derived from the literatures of the global consumer culture. Previous researches on AGCC are based on the consumer acculturation studies on the immigrant consumers' adaptation to the host country, combined with theories of cultural values, consumer ethnocentrism, and country of origin effect. Consumer culture positioning is identified by Alden et al. (1999). They proposed the global consumer culture positioning (GCCP) in contrast to two other positioning, namely, the foreign consumer culture positioning (FCCP) and the local consumer culture positioning (LCCP). Moreover, because previous studies on the realm of the global consumer culture are mainly by Western scholars, this study focuses on the Taiwanese consumers to explore more understanding of consumers in a non- western context.
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