Abstract:
"
At the turn of the twenty-first century, greenhouse gas emissions and rising
environmental temperature, along with natural disasters, have lead people to rethink
their sustainable footprint. Over half of the world’s clothing is manufacturing in Asia,
a continent suffering from deadstock and offcuts ending in landfills. Therefore the
fashion retailers and academics are looking at re-sale models despite the Asian cultural
taboos.
There is a necessity for structured academic research to understand consumer’s
reclaimed fashion buying behaviour. Empirical findings suggests, situational factors,
consumer perceived values, subjective norms, and perceived behavioral control are
suggested to drive reclaimed fashion buying. Theoretical models such as the theory of
planned behaviour and sustainable purchase framework mainly identify the relationship
with the reclaimed fashion buying behaviour. A positivistic philosophy is applied due
to the highly structured nature of the study. The conceptual framework is developed,
taking the deductive approach to deduce the hypothesis. A questionnaire is circulated
amongst 260 participants underlying the questions based on determinants using mono method research choice to test the hypothesis.
The quantitatively analyzed data suggested that the perceived behavioral control of a
millennial consumer is the most crucial factor in determining reclaimed fashion buying
behaviour while personal factors positively derive it. The results further implied that
situational factors weakly perform in buying behaviour. According to the findings, it is
evident that consumer’s decisions on adopting reclaimed fashion are based on both
individual-related and peer-related surroundings. Based on the findings, this thesis
provides insightful recommendations to retailers and future researchers.
"