[Cadernos Ebrape] [CALL FOR PAPERS](http://bibliotecadigital.fgv.br/ojs/index.php/cadernosebape/issue/view/4483) Uncertain consumption practices in an uncertain future Deadline: February 1st, 2021 (Articles only in English) Guest Editors Russell W. Belk York University / Schulich School of Business, Toronto - Canada Luís A. Pessôa Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Rio de Janeiro / IAG Business School, Rio de Janeiro - RJ, Brazil Vitor M. Lima York University / Schulich School of Business, Toronto - Canada [Line] The world has fallen apart right before our eyes. ?The pandemic is very likely the largest shock to the global status quo we will experience in our lifetimes? (BELK, 2020). Those New Year's resolutions perhaps no longer make sense as originally imagined. Plans for starting a new career, a new diet, the family trip, having a child, moving out of parents' homes, going under an elective surgery, doing a cosmetic procedure, renewing the old wardrobe, are now paused, changed, or canceled. In other cases, changes in the environment like low interest rates may empower other behaviors like buying a first house. For those lucky enough to still have a job and work from home, they may save both time and money. Within this scenario, more than ever, what, how, and why tomorrow will be as it will be is an open question. As Giddens (1991, 92) states, traumatic events disrupt consumers' beliefs in ?the continuity of their self-identity and the constancy of their social and material environments of a ction.? In this vein, ontological insecurity, that is, the perception of the lack of order and stability, can lead to the overlapping of fear with hope, dysphoria with euphoria, happiness with sadness, tolerance with intolerance (KIRK and RIFKIN, 2020). Despite previous studies in consumer research (e.g., BAKER and BAKER, 2016; OZANNE, 2019), future scenarios of consumption practices in unprecedented and catastrophic times remain understudied (CAMPBELL, INMAN, KIRMANI et al., 2020). The relevance of such an investigation lies in the fact that humanity may face several revisions of what it means to be alive (LEROY, ROBLES, KILPELA et al., 2020), to be socially responsible (HE and HARRIS, 2020), to love our family (WALSH, 2020), to be an altruist (CHENG, LAM and LEUNG 2020), to touch and be touched (KATILA,GAN and GOODWIN, 2020), and, unquestionably, to be ethical (JEFFREY, 2020). Consumption practices thus may play a relevant role in shaping how people will navigate in the turbulent and seemingly surreal future. That said, we welcome conceptual and empirical research from marketing scholars, and social scientists broadly speaking, to examine the urgent topic of coping with an uncertain future. To this end, we encourage novel and original contributions to interpretative consumer research (BELK and SOBH, 2019). As a special issue is international in scope. We expect to include critical and innovative studies with the potential to push the boundaries of current knowledge about coping with COVID-19 adversity. We welcome a diversity of contexts, methodologies, and ideas. Thus, in times of uncertainty, we ask: ? What is the role of possessions, material and immaterial, in helping consumers to reflect on their future identity projects? ? What is the meaning of conspicuous consumption in a scenario without the gaze of others? ? How do consumers socially construct and share narratives, memes, videos,and photos in order to cope with uncertainty? ? How have digital influencers been contributing to alleviating or increasing consumers' desires? ? In what ways have technologies provided self-coherence in a fragmented world? ? To what extent has social isolation influenced the experience of physical and virtual social interactions? ? How will consumer practices and lifestyles be shaped by a ?new social order?? ? How does imagination provide hope for a better tomorrow and vice-versa? ? In what ways can policymakers draft future public consumer policies based on this liminal moment? [Line] REFERENCES BAKER, S. M.; BAKER, C. N. The Bounce in Our Steps from Shared Material Resources in Cultural Trauma and Recovery. Journal of the Association for Consumer Research, v. 1, n. 2, p. 314-335, 2016. BELK, R. W. Life in a Post-Pandemic World. The Journal of ResInt Canada, v. 4, n. 1, p. 20-23, 2020. BELK, R. W.; SOBH, R. No assemblage required: On pursuing original consumer culture theory. Marketing Theory, v. 19, n. 4, p. 489-507, 2019. CAMPBELL, M. C. et al. In Times of Trouble: A Framework for Understanding Consumers' Responses to Threats. Journal of Consumer Research, v. 0, ucaa036, 2020. Available at: <https://doi.org/10.1093/jcr/ucaa036>. Accessed on: August 24, 2020. CHENG, K. K.; LAM, T. H.; LEUNG, C. C. Wearing face masks in the community during the COVID-19 pandemic: altruism and solidarity. The Lancet, v. 2019, n. 20, p. 2019-2020, 2020. GIDDENS, A. Modernity and Self-Identity: Self and Society in the Late Modern Age. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1991. HE, H.; HARRIS, L. The impact of COVID-19 pandemic on corporate social responsibility and marketing philosophy. Journal of Business Research, v. 116, p. 176-182, May 2020. JEFFREY, D. I. Relational ethical approaches to the COVID-19 pandemic. Journal of medical ethics, v. 46, n. 8, p. 495-498, 2020. KATILA, J.; GAN, Y.; GOODWIN, M. H. Interaction rituals and ?social distancin?: New haptic trajectories and touching from a distance in the time of COVID-19. Discourse Studies, v. 22, n. 4, p. 418-440, 2020. KIRK, C. P.; RIFKIN, L. S. I?ll trade you diamonds for toilet paper: Consumer reacting, coping and adapting behaviors in the COVID-19 pandemic. Journal of Business Research, v. 117, n. May, p. 124-131, 2020. LEROY, A. S. et al. Dying in the Face of the COVID-19 Pandemic: Contextual Considerations and Clinical Recommendations. Psychological Trauma: Theory, Research, Practice, and Policy, v. 12, p. 98-99, 2020. OZANNE, L. K. Creating value to mitigate disaster harm: how the sharing economy can support consumers and policy makers. In: BELK, R. W.; ECKHARDT, G. M.; BARDHI, F. (Eds.). Handbook of the Sharing Economy. London: Edward Elgar Publishing, 2019. p. 254-265. WALSH, F. Loss and Resilience in the Time of COVID-19: Meaning Making, Hope, and Transcendence. Family Process, Early View, p. 1-14, 2020. [Line] Cadernos EBAPE.BR is an online journal on Administration published in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, by FGV EBAPE (Brazilian School of Public and Business Administration of Getulio Vargas Foundation) and it is an open access journal http://bibliotecadigital.fgv.br/ojs/index.php/cadernosebape/index. Will be accepted submissions only in English. All approved papers will be published in the original language (English). We expect that the accepted papers (after blind review and analysis by the guest editors) will be published in 6 to 8 months from the result of the desk review. Cadernos EBAPE.BR is classified by the CAPES Qualis system as A2. [Line] GUIDELINES Author(s) should follow the guidelines for submitting papers to Cadernos EBAPE.BR in: http://bibliotecadigital.fgv.br/ojs/index.php/cadernosebape/pages/view/norma... Papers should be submitted through the link: https://mc04.manuscriptcentral.com/cebape-scielo. You must register as an author, unless you have done it previously. Note: please indicate in the field ?AUTHOR'S COVER LETTER? that your paper is for the special issue: ?Uncertain consumption practices in an uncertain future?. The deadline for paper submissions is February 1st, 2021. For any questions, please contact: [Russell W. Belk](mailto:rbelk@schulich.yorku.ca) [Luís A. Pessôa](mailto:lpessoa@iag.puc-rio.br) [Vitor M. Lima](mailto:lmv2607@yorku.ca) [Line] EDITORIAL BOARD PhD. Hélio Arthur Reis Irigaray Editor-in-Chief Fabiana Braga Leal Editorial Assistant Jackelyne de Oliveira da Silva Editorial Assist [Line] Cadernos EBAPE.BR Rua Jornalista Orlando Dantas, 30 - Botafogo Rio de Janeiro/RJ | Brasil +55 21 3083-2731 ISSN 1679 3951 [PAPERS SUBMISSIONS](http://bibliotecadigital.fgv.br/ojs/index.php/cadernosebape/pages/view/norma...) 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