The willingness to boycott among Malaysian Muslims

The phenomenon of consumer boycotts has been in existence in the marketplace menacing businesses and organizations since more than a century ago (Smith & Li, 2010).Yet, the rightful and deserved attention in understanding consumer boycotts were acknowledged by academicians and researchers only w...

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Main Authors: Abdul Talib, Asmat Nizam, Abdul Latif, Samshul Amry, Alias, Nursiha
Format: Conference or Workshop Item
Language:English
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://repo.uum.edu.my/10686/1/As.pdf
http://repo.uum.edu.my/10686/
http://www.iimassociation.com/3rd-global-islamic-mkt-con-callforpapers.php
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Institution: Universiti Utara Malaysia
Language: English
id my.uum.repo.10686
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spelling my.uum.repo.106862014-04-21T06:39:13Z http://repo.uum.edu.my/10686/ The willingness to boycott among Malaysian Muslims Abdul Talib, Asmat Nizam Abdul Latif, Samshul Amry Alias, Nursiha BP Islam. Bahaism. Theosophy, etc HF Commerce The phenomenon of consumer boycotts has been in existence in the marketplace menacing businesses and organizations since more than a century ago (Smith & Li, 2010).Yet, the rightful and deserved attention in understanding consumer boycotts were acknowledged by academicians and researchers only within the last past decade.Consumer boycott is a form of economic as well as social threat that may threaten the brand image (Klein, Smith & John, 2004) and corporate image of a firm (Lindenmeier, Tscheulin & Drevs, 2012) on a smaller scale. But on a larger scale, consumer boycotts if not carefully dealt with, may affect the host country's economy and its image. As such, the threats and occurrences of boycott can possibly upset the efforts in attracting and retaining investments in a country. Consequently, it is suffice to state that boycott is a situation where marketers, businesses, organizations or firms would want to avoid at all cost (Klein et al, 2004). Based on previous empirical researches, there are various psychological (Klein et al, 2004; Smith & Li, 2004) and social motivations underlying a boycott; as the nature of boycott is diverse (Friedman, 1985); nonetheless, boycotts are often used widely as a "coercive marketplace tactic" (John & Klein, 2003) to achieve certain instrumental or expressive goals (Friedman, 1985). 2012 Conference or Workshop Item NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en http://repo.uum.edu.my/10686/1/As.pdf Abdul Talib, Asmat Nizam and Abdul Latif, Samshul Amry and Alias, Nursiha (2012) The willingness to boycott among Malaysian Muslims. In: 3rd Global Islamic Marketing Conference (GIMC3), December 17, 2012, Cairo, Egypt. (Unpublished) http://www.iimassociation.com/3rd-global-islamic-mkt-con-callforpapers.php
institution Universiti Utara Malaysia
building UUM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Utara Malaysia
content_source UUM Institutionali Repository
url_provider http://repo.uum.edu.my/
language English
topic BP Islam. Bahaism. Theosophy, etc
HF Commerce
spellingShingle BP Islam. Bahaism. Theosophy, etc
HF Commerce
Abdul Talib, Asmat Nizam
Abdul Latif, Samshul Amry
Alias, Nursiha
The willingness to boycott among Malaysian Muslims
description The phenomenon of consumer boycotts has been in existence in the marketplace menacing businesses and organizations since more than a century ago (Smith & Li, 2010).Yet, the rightful and deserved attention in understanding consumer boycotts were acknowledged by academicians and researchers only within the last past decade.Consumer boycott is a form of economic as well as social threat that may threaten the brand image (Klein, Smith & John, 2004) and corporate image of a firm (Lindenmeier, Tscheulin & Drevs, 2012) on a smaller scale. But on a larger scale, consumer boycotts if not carefully dealt with, may affect the host country's economy and its image. As such, the threats and occurrences of boycott can possibly upset the efforts in attracting and retaining investments in a country. Consequently, it is suffice to state that boycott is a situation where marketers, businesses, organizations or firms would want to avoid at all cost (Klein et al, 2004). Based on previous empirical researches, there are various psychological (Klein et al, 2004; Smith & Li, 2004) and social motivations underlying a boycott; as the nature of boycott is diverse (Friedman, 1985); nonetheless, boycotts are often used widely as a "coercive marketplace tactic" (John & Klein, 2003) to achieve certain instrumental or expressive goals (Friedman, 1985).
format Conference or Workshop Item
author Abdul Talib, Asmat Nizam
Abdul Latif, Samshul Amry
Alias, Nursiha
author_facet Abdul Talib, Asmat Nizam
Abdul Latif, Samshul Amry
Alias, Nursiha
author_sort Abdul Talib, Asmat Nizam
title The willingness to boycott among Malaysian Muslims
title_short The willingness to boycott among Malaysian Muslims
title_full The willingness to boycott among Malaysian Muslims
title_fullStr The willingness to boycott among Malaysian Muslims
title_full_unstemmed The willingness to boycott among Malaysian Muslims
title_sort willingness to boycott among malaysian muslims
publishDate 2012
url http://repo.uum.edu.my/10686/1/As.pdf
http://repo.uum.edu.my/10686/
http://www.iimassociation.com/3rd-global-islamic-mkt-con-callforpapers.php
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