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      Consumer Attitudes Toward Fashion Counterfeits: Application of the Theory of Planned Behavior

      1 , 2
      Clothing and Textiles Research Journal
      SAGE Publications

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          Abstract

          This study examines consumer motivations that can explain attitudes toward purchasing fashion counterfeit goods and tests the underlying mechanism of intent to purchase fashion counterfeits based on the theory of planned behavior. A random sample of female college students (N = 336) participate in this study. Product appearance, past purchase behavior, value consciousness, and normative susceptibility are significant predictors of attitude toward buying fashion counterfeit goods. Attitude, subjective norm, and perceived behavioral control are significantly related to intent to purchase fashion counterfeit goods. This research extends the theory of planned behavior and tests two additional paths that significantly improve explanatory power of the theory and prediction of consumer intent to buy fashion counterfeit goods.

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          Most cited references51

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          The theory of planned behavior

          Icek Ajzen (1991)
          Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, 50(2), 179-211
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            Evaluating Structural Equation Models with Unobservable Variables and Measurement Error

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              Mediation in experimental and nonexperimental studies: new procedures and recommendations.

              Mediation is said to occur when a causal effect of some variable X on an outcome Y is explained by some intervening variable M. The authors recommend that with small to moderate samples, bootstrap methods (B. Efron & R. Tibshirani, 1993) be used to assess mediation. Bootstrap tests are powerful because they detect that the sampling distribution of the mediated effect is skewed away from 0. They argue that R. M. Baron and D. A. Kenny's (1986) recommendation of first testing the X --> Y association for statistical significance should not be a requirement when there is a priori belief that the effect size is small or suppression is a possibility. Empirical examples and computer setups for bootstrap analyses are provided.

                Author and article information

                Journal
                Clothing and Textiles Research Journal
                Clothing and Textiles Research Journal
                SAGE Publications
                0887-302X
                1940-2473
                April 2010
                December 22 2009
                April 2010
                : 28
                : 2
                : 79-94
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Auburn University,
                [2 ]Iowa State University
                Article
                10.1177/0887302X09332513
                2172d4b7-f80a-4a5f-933a-b8bb0cac0f07
                © 2010

                http://journals.sagepub.com/page/policies/text-and-data-mining-license

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