Bad for Me, Bad for My Planet: A Qualitative Exploration of Individual Choices to Consume Fast Food

2012 ◽  
Author(s):  
Steve A. Schuetz ◽  
Heather Ventura ◽  
Bekka Wolfgeher ◽  
Anthony Littrell ◽  
Alicia Chandler
2019 ◽  
pp. 003022281988724
Author(s):  
Christiaan Prinsloo ◽  
Adri Prinsloo

Despite the alarming suicide rate among South Korean emerging adults, relatively little is known about their unfettered perspectives on death and suicide. Therefore, an innovative data collection technique was developed to apprehend the meanings that emerging adults attribute to death and suicide in their explorations of the phenomena through a selection of short stories. A convenience sample ( N = 114) responded to a survey in which participants transferred their feelings toward death and suicide to characters or events in the short stories. A qualitative content analysis revealed relatively permissive perspectives toward death and suicide. Negative perspectives on death are associated with societal victimization and positive perspectives with naturalistic fatalism. Positive perspectives on suicide are overwhelmingly rooted in existential, individual choices while negative perspectives focus on societal pressures. These perspectives contribute to illuminating tensions between traditionalist collectivism and contemporary individualism in Korean society that could inform suicide prevention initiatives for emerging adults.


2006 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wen-Ruey Chang ◽  
Yueng-Hsiang Huang ◽  
Kai Way Li ◽  
Alfred Filiaggi ◽  
Theodore K. Courtney

2009 ◽  
Author(s):  
Young Seok Seo ◽  
Mina Cho ◽  
Juno Park ◽  
Min-Sun Kim ◽  
Dongil Kim

2011 ◽  
Author(s):  
Laura M. Cohen ◽  
Meghan B. Owenz ◽  
Blaine Fowers

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