All Stories

  1. Mapping Digital Nudges and Recommender Systems for Obesity Prevention: Scoping Review
  2. Socioeconomic status mostly outweighs psychological factors in predicting individual ecological footprints
  3. A meta-analysis assessing the effectiveness of demand-side interventions for sustainable food consumption and food waste reduction
  4. Bridging the Perception Gap in Parliament: UK MPs underestimate climate policy support and overestimate polarisation.
  5. META BI: A tool for describing behavioural interventions
  6. Food waste salience and task knowledge to reduce individual food waste: A field experiment in a restaurant setting
  7. Ultra-Processed Foods Consumption and Metabolic Syndrome in European Children, Adolescents, and Adults: Results from the I.Family Study
  8. Drivers of and barriers to Sustainable Urban Mobility Plan implementation: Lessons from Copenhagen
  9. Advancing sustainable consumption: SDG 12, behavioural science, and the work of the United Nations
  10. Driving sustainable change: A systematic map of behaviorally informed interventions to promote sustainable mobility behavior
  11. In Praise of Computation
  12. A joint research agenda for climate action bridges behavioral sciences and urban planning
  13. Choice architecture promotes sustainable choices in online food-delivery apps
  14. ‘Let me recommend… ’: use of digital nudges or recommender systems for overweight and obesity prevention—a scoping review protocol
  15. Interventions reducing car usage: Systematic review and meta-analysis
  16. Introduction to the Research Handbook on Nudges and Society
  17. Nudging employees for corporate sustainability: a systematic evidence map
  18. Policy for sustainable entrepreneurship: A crowdsourced framework
  19. Shifting consumers towards sustainable food consumption and avoiding food waste: Protocol for a machine-learning assisted systematic review and meta-analysis of demand-side interventions
  20. Perspectives for sustainable consumption: An exploratory study of the discourses and practices of Cordoba's citizens (Argentina)
  21. Review: Do green defaults reduce meat consumption?
  22. Nudging more sustainable grocery purchases: Behavioural innovations in a supermarket setting
  23. A longitudinal causal graph analysis investigating modifiable risk factors and obesity in a European cohort of children and adolescents
  24. Battle of the primes – The effect and interplay of health and hedonic primes on food choice
  25. Healthy eating in the wild: An experience-sampling study of how food environments and situational factors shape out-of-home dietary success
  26. Shaping healthy and sustainable food systems with behavioural food policy
  27. Digital Media Use in Association with Sensory Taste Preferences in European Children and Adolescents—Results from the I.Family Study
  28. Mitigating climate change via food consumption and food waste: A systematic map of behavioral interventions
  29. The effect of smileys as motivational incentives on children’s fruit and vegetable choice, consumption and waste: A field experiment in schools in five European countries
  30. Improving Climate Change Mitigation Analysis: A Framework for Examining Feasibility
  31. The power of green defaults: the impact of regional variation of opt-out tariffs on green energy demand in Germany
  32. Consumer Policy in the Age of Covid-19
  33. Behaviour Change for Sustainable Consumption
  34. A cross-sectional study of obesogenic behaviours and family rules according to family structure in European children
  35. Book Notes “Economics and Social Sciences” 2/2020
  36. Nudging hell und dunkel: Regeln für digitales Nudging
  37. Journal of Consumer Policy’s 40th Anniversary Conference: A Forward Looking Consumer Policy Research Agenda
  38. Parental unemployment associated with the lack of the effectiveness of a children obesity prevention program: Results from the IDEFICS study
  39. Association between variants of neuromedin U gene and taste thresholds and food preferences in European children: Results from the IDEFICS study
  40. Emotion-driven impulsiveness but not decision-making ability and cognitive inflexibility predicts weight status in adults
  41. Nudging to move: a scoping review of the use of choice architecture interventions to promote physical activity in the general population
  42. Book Notes “Economics and Social Sciences”
  43. Communicating to and engaging with the public in regulatory science[Link]
  44. A within-sibling pair analysis of lifestyle behaviours and BMI z-score in the multi-centre I.Family study
  45. Reply to the letter to the editor: “Socioeconomic status and childhood metabolic syndrome”
  46. Peer Effects on Weight Status, Dietary Behaviour and Physical Activity among Adolescents in Europe: Findings from the I.Family Study
  47. Awards
  48. Cross‐sectional and longitudinal associations between psychosocial well‐being and sleep in European children and adolescents
  49. Prospective associations between socioeconomically disadvantaged groups and metabolic syndrome risk in European children. Results from the IDEFICS study
  50. Trusting nudges? Lessons from an international survey
  51. Behavioural Insights and (Un)healthy Dietary Choices: a Review of Current Evidence
  52. Prospective associations between social vulnerabilities and children’s weight status. Results from the IDEFICS study
  53. Association between parental consumer attitudes with their children’s sensory taste preferences as well as their food choice
  54. Gerhard Scherhorn, 21 February 1930–28 February 2018
  55. SocialLab – Nutztierhaltung im Spiegel der Gesellschaft
  56. Which Europeans Like Nudges? Approval and Controversy in Four European Countries
  57. Behavioral Economics and Public Opinion
  58. Young Adults and Their Finances: An International Comparative Study on Applied Financial Literacy
  59. Social vulnerability as a predictor of physical activity and screen time in European children
  60. Prospective associations between dietary patterns and body composition changes in European children: the IDEFICS study
  61. Familial Resemblance in Dietary Intakes of Children, Adolescents, and Parents: Does Dietary Quality Play a Role?
  62. Book Notes "Economics and Social Sciences" 3/2017
  63. A worldwide consensus on nudging? Not quite, but almost
  64. Celebration of 40 Years of the Journal of Consumer Policy and What the Next 40 Might Look Like
  65. Associations between social vulnerabilities and psychosocial problems in European children. Results from the IDEFICS study
  66. Editorial: Five Key Articles on Consumer Policy
  67. Editorial to a Special Section
  68. Viewpoint: Beyond carrots and sticks: Europeans support health nudges
  69. Erratum to: Palatable food consumption in children: interplay between (food) reward motivation and the home food environment
  70. Editorial: 40th Anniversary of the Journal of Consumer Policy
  71. Beahavioural regulation (Nudging)
  72. Corrigendum to “Experimental Evidence on the Impact of Food Advertising on Children’s Knowledge about and Preferences for Healthful Food”
  73. Values, Norms, and Peer Effects on Weight Status
  74. Cohort Profile: The transition from childhood to adolescence in European children–how I.Family extends the IDEFICS cohort
  75. The determinants of food choice
  76. Potential selection effects when estimating associations between the infancy peak or adiposity rebound and later body mass index in children
  77. Sustainable user innovation from a policy perspective: a systematic literature review
  78. The impact of familial, behavioural and psychosocial factors on the SES gradient for childhood overweight in Europe. A longitudinal study
  79. Pester power and its consequences: do European children’s food purchasing requests relate to diet and weight outcomes?
  80. The Journal of Consumer Policy Outstanding Reviewer Award 2016
  81. Determinant factors of physical fitness in European children
  82. Do Europeans Like Nudges?
  83. Frontiers in Sustainable Consumption Research
  84. A welcome to our new Editorial Board
  85. Adherence to combined lifestyle factors and their contribution to obesity in the IDEFICS study
  86. Verbraucher und die digitale Welt – wo geht die Reise hin?
  87. Debt out of control: The links between self-control, compulsive buying, and real debts
  88. Peer effects on obesity in a sample of European children
  89. Clustering of lifestyle behaviours and relation to body composition in European children. The IDEFICS study
  90. Exit from the high street: an exploratory study of sustainable fashion consumption pioneers
  91. Prospective associations between socio-economic status and dietary patterns in European children: the Identification and Prevention of Dietary- and Lifestyle-induced Health Effects in Children and Infants (IDEFICS) Study
  92. Handbook of Research on Sustainable Consumption
  93. Objective Measures of the Built Environment and Physical Activity in Children: From Walkability to Moveability
  94. Adherence to the obesity-related lifestyle intervention targets in the IDEFICS study
  95. Does the FTO gene interact with the socioeconomic status on the obesity development among young European children? Results from the IDEFICS study
  96. Die Grenzen des „rationalen“ Konsumierens – Empirische Erkenntnisse und verbraucherpolitische Konsequenzen
  97. Are context-specific measures of parental-reported physical activity and sedentary behaviour associated with accelerometer data in 2–9-year-old European children?
  98. Redesigning Cockpits
  99. Country-specific dietary patterns and associations with socioeconomic status in European children: the IDEFICS study
  100. Early Childhood Electronic Media Use as a Predictor of Poorer Well-being
  101. Consumer Socialization, Buying Decisions, and Consumer Behaviour in Children: Introduction to the Special Issue
  102. Folke Ölander, 21 July 1935–28 December 2013
  103. Young children’s screen activities, sweet drink consumption and anthropometry: results from a prospective European study
  104. Physical activity and sedentary behaviour in European children: the IDEFICS study
  105. Sustainable food consumption: an overview of contemporary issues and policies
  106. Sustainable food consumption: when evidence-based policy making meets policy-minded research–Introduction to the special issue
  107. The Journal of Consumer Policy Outstanding Reviewer Award 2013
  108. Alternativen zum Informationsparadigma der Verbraucherpolitik
  109. Alternativen zum Informationsparadigma der Verbraucherpolitik
  110. Green by Default
  111. Maternal employment and childhood obesity – A European perspective
  112. Clustering of unhealthy food around German schools and its influence on dietary behavior in school children: a pilot study
  113. Clustering of multiple lifestyle behaviours and its association to cardiovascular risk factors in children: the IDEFICS study
  114. Young children’s screen habits are associated with consumption of sweetened beverages independently of parental norms
  115. „Check Verbraucherpolitik und Verbraucherbeteiligung“ – Empfehlungen für eine evidenzbasierte Verbraucherpolitik
  116. Experimental Evidence on the Impact of Food Advertising on Children’s Knowledge about and Preferences for Healthful Food
  117. Automatically Green: Behavioral Economics and Environmental Protection
  118. Erratum: Overweight in singletons compared to children with siblings: the IDEFICS study
  119. Gesundheit, Essen und Nachhaltigkeit: Anforderungen an die Ernährungsaufklärung
  120. Prevalence of negative life events and chronic adversities in European pre- and primary-school children: results from the IDEFICS study
  121. Parental perceptions of and concerns about child's body weight in eight European countries – the IDEFICS study
  122. Television habits in relation to overweight, diet and taste preferences in European children: the IDEFICS study
  123. Overweight in singletons compared to children with siblings: the IDEFICS study
  124. 12 FRAGEN AN ... 12 QUESTIONS TO ...
  125. Parental education and frequency of food consumption in European children: the IDEFICS study
  126. Sie lebt!
  127. Prevalence of psychosomatic and emotional symptoms in European school-aged children and its relationship with childhood adversities: results from the IDEFICS study
  128. From sleep duration to childhood obesity—what are the pathways?
  129. Development and application of a moveability index to quantify possibilities for physical activity in the built environment of children
  130. The Journal of Consumer Policy Outstanding Reviewer Award 2011
  131. Fiscal food policy: Equity and practice
  132. An Introduction to the Special Issue on “Behavioural Economics, Consumer Policy, and Consumer Law”
  133. Instruments for analysing the influence of advertising on children's food choices
  134. Repeatability of maternal report on prenatal, perinatal and early postnatal factors: findings from the IDEFICS parental questionnaire
  135. The IDEFICS cohort: design, characteristics and participation in the baseline survey
  136. The IDEFICS community-oriented intervention programme: a new model for childhood obesity prevention in Europe?
  137. ‘Better safe than sorry’: consumer perceptions of and deliberations on nanotechnologies
  138. Chubby cheeks and climate change: childhood obesity as a sustainable development issue
  139. Communicating Sustainable Consumption
  140. An Editorial and a Welcome: Our New Editorial Board (2011–2015)
  141. Consumer Behavior in Childhood Obesity Research and Policy
  142. Tom D. Campbell (Ed.): The Library of Corporate Responsibilities
  143. Einfluss des Konsumverhaltens auf die Entwicklung von Übergewicht bei Kindern
  144. Time Allocation, Consumption, and Consumer Policy
  145. Special Section on “Nanotechnologies and the Consumer”
  146. The Journal of Consumer Policy Outstanding Reviewer Award
  147. Note from the Editors
  148. Note from the Editors
  149. How to convince the unconvincibles? A mass mediated approach to communicate sustainable lifestyles to a low-interest target group
  150. Consumers and deregulation of the electricity market in Germany
  151. Assessment of diet, physical activity and biological, social and environmental factors in a multi-centre European project on diet- and lifestyle-related disorders in children (IDEFICS)
  152. Compulsive buying in maturing consumer societies: An empirical re-inquiry
  153. Pathologisches Kaufen - Eine Literaturübersicht
  154. The Ecological Economics of Consumption
  155. The European consumers’ understanding and perceptions of the “organic” food regime
  156. Ein Jahrzehnt verhaltenswissenschaftlicher Kaufsuchtforschung in Deutschland
  157. Potentials, pitfalls, and policy implications of electronic consumption
  158. The Internet and Sustainable Consumption: Perspectives on a Janus Face
  159. Time and Wealth
  160. Status und Position
  161. Addictive buying in West Germany: An empirical study
  162. Obesity, Metabolic Syndrome and Nutrition