Natural wine: do consumers know what it is, and how natural it really is?

Natural wine is a small but rapidly growing sector within the wine industry. Expertise in the field has been advanced by wine experts and professionals, while publications to aid in further understanding the topic lag behind. This manuscript highlights the need to develop more rigorous methodologies to better understand the market segment of natural wine, its consumers, and their composition and behaviour. Moreover, it calls for a deeper theoretical engagement with the notion of natural wine, which positions it among other sustainable and ecological certifications, including organic, biodynamic or sulphite-free. This would allow researchers to advance from the current state of knowledge, which continues to limit our ‘practical’ capacity for advice to policy makers but not to winemakers and marketers. These theoretical and methodological developments would allow scholars to catch up with debates being held by different social actors in the natural wine scene, including winemakers’ and consumer associations, bloggers, writers and professional marketers.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Alonso-González, Pablo, Parga-Dans, Eva
Format: artículo biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2020-04-01
Subjects:Natural wine, Organic wine, Sustainability, Consumption, Agrofoods,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10261/208946
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spelling dig-ipna-es-10261-2089462022-04-01T04:31:20Z Natural wine: do consumers know what it is, and how natural it really is? Alonso-González, Pablo Parga-Dans, Eva Natural wine Organic wine Sustainability Consumption Agrofoods Natural wine is a small but rapidly growing sector within the wine industry. Expertise in the field has been advanced by wine experts and professionals, while publications to aid in further understanding the topic lag behind. This manuscript highlights the need to develop more rigorous methodologies to better understand the market segment of natural wine, its consumers, and their composition and behaviour. Moreover, it calls for a deeper theoretical engagement with the notion of natural wine, which positions it among other sustainable and ecological certifications, including organic, biodynamic or sulphite-free. This would allow researchers to advance from the current state of knowledge, which continues to limit our ‘practical’ capacity for advice to policy makers but not to winemakers and marketers. These theoretical and methodological developments would allow scholars to catch up with debates being held by different social actors in the natural wine scene, including winemakers’ and consumer associations, bloggers, writers and professional marketers. Peer reviewed 2020-04-24T10:09:33Z 2020-04-24T10:09:33Z 2020-04-01 artículo http://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_6501 Journal of Cleaner Production 251, 119635: 1-13 (2020) 0959-6526 http://hdl.handle.net/10261/208946 10.1016/j.jclepro.2019.119635 1879-1786 en Postprint https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jclepro.2019.119635 Sí open Elsevier
institution IPNA ES
collection DSpace
country España
countrycode ES
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-ipna-es
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Sur
libraryname Biblioteca del IPNA España
language English
topic Natural wine
Organic wine
Sustainability
Consumption
Agrofoods
Natural wine
Organic wine
Sustainability
Consumption
Agrofoods
spellingShingle Natural wine
Organic wine
Sustainability
Consumption
Agrofoods
Natural wine
Organic wine
Sustainability
Consumption
Agrofoods
Alonso-González, Pablo
Parga-Dans, Eva
Natural wine: do consumers know what it is, and how natural it really is?
description Natural wine is a small but rapidly growing sector within the wine industry. Expertise in the field has been advanced by wine experts and professionals, while publications to aid in further understanding the topic lag behind. This manuscript highlights the need to develop more rigorous methodologies to better understand the market segment of natural wine, its consumers, and their composition and behaviour. Moreover, it calls for a deeper theoretical engagement with the notion of natural wine, which positions it among other sustainable and ecological certifications, including organic, biodynamic or sulphite-free. This would allow researchers to advance from the current state of knowledge, which continues to limit our ‘practical’ capacity for advice to policy makers but not to winemakers and marketers. These theoretical and methodological developments would allow scholars to catch up with debates being held by different social actors in the natural wine scene, including winemakers’ and consumer associations, bloggers, writers and professional marketers.
format artículo
topic_facet Natural wine
Organic wine
Sustainability
Consumption
Agrofoods
author Alonso-González, Pablo
Parga-Dans, Eva
author_facet Alonso-González, Pablo
Parga-Dans, Eva
author_sort Alonso-González, Pablo
title Natural wine: do consumers know what it is, and how natural it really is?
title_short Natural wine: do consumers know what it is, and how natural it really is?
title_full Natural wine: do consumers know what it is, and how natural it really is?
title_fullStr Natural wine: do consumers know what it is, and how natural it really is?
title_full_unstemmed Natural wine: do consumers know what it is, and how natural it really is?
title_sort natural wine: do consumers know what it is, and how natural it really is?
publisher Elsevier
publishDate 2020-04-01
url http://hdl.handle.net/10261/208946
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