Do as You Would Be Done by: The Importance of Animal Welfare in the Global Beauty Care Industry

Nowadays, the concept of sustainability is discussed in almost every product category. In this context, companies commit themselves to advancing good social, environmental, and animal-welfare practices in their business operations, including sustainable s

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Abstract Nowadays, the concept of sustainability is discussed in almost every product category. In this context, companies commit themselves to advancing good social, environmental, and animal-welfare practices in their business operations, including sustainable sourcing practices. Nevertheless, even if many companies in the global beauty care industry have embraced such claims, common practices such as water pollution, the use of pesticides in the production of fibers, poor labor conditions, and animal testing are omnipresent. According to the European Commission, 11.5 million animals were used in the European Union for experimental or scientific purposes in 2011. Worldwide this figure rises to 115 million animals annually (Four Paws International 2013). In the rising tension between “greenwashing” and the use of ethical/environmental commitments that are nothing more than “sheer lip service,” the question arises of the role of the consumers with regard to sustainable practices in the cosmetics industry. Are consumers increasingly conscious of the adverse effects of ethical and environmental imbalances? And what effect does this knowledge have on their buying behavior? On the divergent poles of hypocrisy and true commitment, to advance current understanding of sustainability and related links to consumer perception and actual buying behavior related to ethical issues, the aim of this chapter is to provide a comprehensive framework of animal welfare in the personal care industry. Based on existing theoretical and empirical insights it becomes evident that psychological determinants, such as personality traits, empathy, ethical obligation, and self-identity, as well as context-related determinants in terms of one’s ethical value perception of products, the trade-off between ethical and conventional products, and an individual’s involvement, represent antecedents of ethical consumer behavior, which can be expressed through the avoidance of specific products and brands and/or consumer boycott and buycott towards cosmetics using

N. Hennigs (*) · E. Karampournioti · K.-P. Wiedmann  Institute of Marketing and Management, Leibniz University of Hannover, Koenigsworther Platz 1, 30167 Hannover, Germany e-mail: [email protected] © Springer Science+Business Media Singapore 2016 S.S. Muthu and M.A. Gardetti (eds.), Green Fashion, Environmental Footprints and Eco-design of Products and Processes, DOI 10.1007/978-981-10-0111-6_5

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animal-tested ingredients. Our concept provides a useful instrument for both academics and managers as a basis to create and market successfully cosmetics that represent ethical and environmental excellence. Keywords Animal welfare · Ethical and environmental practices · Global beauty care industry

1 Introduction The greatness of a nation and its moral progress can be judged by the way its animals are treated. Mahatma Gandhi

Driven by rising consumer incomes, changing lifestyles, and a higher demand for luxury products, especially cosmetics, the global beauty c