Mapping our underlying cognitions and emotions about good environmental behavior : why we fail to act despite our best intentions

Power, Nicola and Beattie, Geoff and McGuire, Laura (2017) Mapping our underlying cognitions and emotions about good environmental behavior : why we fail to act despite our best intentions. Semiotica, 2017 (215). pp. 193-234. ISSN 0037-1998

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Abstract

Despite the widespread recognition of climate change as the single biggest global threat, the willingness of people to change their behaviour to mitigate its effects is limited. Past research, often focussing on specific categories of behaviour, has highlighted a very significant gap between people’s intentions to behave more sustainably and their actual behaviour. This paper presents a new approach to this issue, by using more open-ended questions to map a much broader range of cognitions and emotions about good environmental behaviour. Two key findings emerged. Firstly, participants were aware of the contradiction between their level of concern about the environment and their willingness to act in more sustainable ways. The qualitative analysis further revealed that this discrepancy often hinged on a lack of knowledge about how to act more sustainably; the analysis also revealed a desire for more information about genuinely green behaviour. Secondly, pro-environmental behaviour was often conceptualised by participants in essentially ‘social’ terms; anticipated emotions relating to sustainable/non-sustainable behaviour were as closely tied to the behaviour of one’s peers as to one’s own behaviour. This finding suggests that we must highlight the social dimension in any interventions to increase sustainable behaviours amongst the public.

Item Type:
Journal Article
Journal or Publication Title:
Semiotica
Additional Information:
Copyright © 2017 by Walter de Gruyter GmbH
Uncontrolled Keywords:
/dk/atira/pure/subjectarea/asjc/3300/3310
Subjects:
?? climate changesustainabilityvalue-action gapenvironmental behaviorcognitionemotionslinguistics and languagelanguage and linguisticsliterature and literary theory ??
ID Code:
78482
Deposited By:
Deposited On:
02 Mar 2016 16:52
Refereed?:
Yes
Published?:
Published
Last Modified:
12 Nov 2023 00:18