Article

"It's Us, You Know, There's a Feeling of Community": Exploring Notions of Community in a Consumer Co-operative

Details

Citation

Wells V, Ellis N, Slack R & Moufahim M (2019) "It's Us, You Know, There's a Feeling of Community": Exploring Notions of Community in a Consumer Co-operative. Journal of Business Ethics, 158 (3), pp. 617-635. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10551-017-3747-4

Abstract
The notion of community infers unity and a source of moral obligations in an organisational ethic between individuals or groups. As such, a community, having a strong sense of collective identity, may foster collective action to promote social change for the betterment of society. This research critically explores notions of community through analysing discursive identity construction practices within a member-owned urban consumer co-operative (CC) public house in the UK. A strong sense of community is an often-claimed CC characteristic. The paper’s main contributions stem from using the lens of identity work to critically unpack the notion of community through highlighting paradoxical tensions of community residing within CCs. The findings reveal that the notion of community may be illusionary with counter-veiling forces, one that reflects a more traditional sense of connection, attachment and communion, and the other of boundaries, disconnection or division. As these repertoires collide, tensions are evident between the hegemonic discourse of neoliberal managerialism and that of democratic collective ownership. Despite these individual-level tensions, communities may operate within boundaries enabling an organisational and societal ethic, beyond the individual.

Keywords
Consumer co-operative; Community; Identity; Symbolic boundaries; Tensions; Discourse analysis; Public house

Journal
Journal of Business Ethics: Volume 158, Issue 3

StatusPublished
Publication date30/09/2019
Publication date online28/11/2017
Date accepted by journal16/11/2017
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/27362
PublisherSpringer Nature
ISSN0167-4544
eISSN1573-0697

People (1)

People

Dr Mona Moufahim

Dr Mona Moufahim

Senior Lecturer, Marketing & Retail