The Relevance of Male Breadwinner Ideology for the Analysis and Design of Marketing Systems

Haase M, Becker I, Nill A, Shultz II CJ, Gentry JW (2013)


Publication Language: English

Publication Type: Conference contribution, Conference Contribution

Publication year: 2013

Publisher: Macromarketing Society & York University

Edited Volumes: Proceedings of the 38th Annual Macromarketing Conference (Toronto)

City/Town: Toronto

Pages Range: 271--305

Conference Proceedings Title: Proceedings of the 38th Annual Macromarketing Conference

Abstract

This paper continues and extends available work in macromarketing on the male breadwinner ideology (Nill and Shultz 2010). “Male breadwinning” designates the effects of shared and overlapping ideologies and thus also patterns of marketing systems. Like institutions, ideologies are both restrictions and enabler for market processes. Ideologies influence the economic organization and thus type and number of relationships in marketing systems. Our paper wants to contribute to the development of measures which can inform the private as well as public decision-making units about the ideologies available in actual as well as potential marketing systems and the influence they might have on the demand for particular offerings. Based on a qualitative pre-study, the paper develops a Male Breadwinning Model and conducts a vignette analysis in Southern Germany. First results of the vignette study are included.

Authors with CRIS profile

Involved external institutions

How to cite

APA:

Haase, M., Becker, I., Nill, A., Shultz II, C.J., & Gentry, J.W. (2013). The Relevance of Male Breadwinner Ideology for the Analysis and Design of Marketing Systems. In Zwick D., Bonsu S. (Eds.), Proceedings of the 38th Annual Macromarketing Conference (pp. 271--305). Toronto: Macromarketing Society & York University.

MLA:

Haase, Michaela, et al. "The Relevance of Male Breadwinner Ideology for the Analysis and Design of Marketing Systems." Proceedings of the 38th Annual Macromarketing Conference Ed. Zwick D., Bonsu S., Toronto: Macromarketing Society & York University, 2013. 271--305.

BibTeX: Download