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Theorizing self‐repairers' worldview–personhood to advance new thinking on extended product lifetimes
Author(s) -
Dermody Janine,
Nagase Yoko,
Berger Wolfram
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
international journal of consumer studies
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.775
H-Index - 71
eISSN - 1470-6431
pISSN - 1470-6423
DOI - 10.1111/ijcs.12582
Subject(s) - personhood , obsolescence , product (mathematics) , epistemology , philosophy of technology , sociology , consumerism , psychology , computer science , engineering ethics , business , philosophy of science , marketing , philosophy , political science , geometry , mathematics , engineering , law
Abstract The ecological and societal problems caused by product obsolescence and consumerism in modern economies constitute a “wicked human‐made problem” of significant magnitude. Current (old) ways of thinking cannot address these problems. Accordingly, in this paper, we critically explore the novel idea of integrated personhood and worldviews to theorize research on self‐repairers and their repair behaviours to extend product lifetimes. We conducted a structured and systematic review of published work ( n  = 183) to identify the conceptual content of the field to inform our theorization. Our findings highlight three key issues. First, constricted theorization undermines understanding of self‐repairers and their product lifetime extension (and spillover) behaviours. Second, the underlying conceptual complexity is typically underestimated. Third, the dominance of voluntarist and deterministic studies impedes new directions in research. From our review, an integrated worldview–personhood framework emerges that can deepen understanding of avant‐garde self‐repairers’ engagement with product lifetimes.

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