On the Relation Between Social Dominance Orientation and Environmentalism: A 25-Nation Study

Approval of hierarchy and inequality in society indexed by social dominance orientation (SDO) extends to support for human dominance over the natural world. We tested this negative association between SDO and environmentalism and the validity of the new Short Social Dominance Orientation scale in tw...

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Veröffentlicht in:Social psychological & personality science 2017
Hauptverfasser: Milfont, Taciano L, Bain, Paul G, Kashima, Yoshihisa, Corral-Verdugo, Victor, Pasquali, Carlota, Johansson, Lars-Olof, Guan, Yanjun, Gouveia, Valdiney V, Garðarsdóttir, Ragna B, Doron, Guy, Bilewicz, Michał, Utsugi, Akira, Aragones, Juan Ignacio, Steg, Linda, Soland, Martin, Park, Joonha, Otto, Siegmar, Demarque, Christophe, Wagner, Claire, Madsen, Ole Jacob, Lebedeva, Nadezhda, González, Roberto, Schultz, P. Wesley, Saiz, José L, Kurz, Tim, Gifford, Robert, Akotia, Charity S, Saviolidis, Nina M, Einarsdóttir, Gró
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Sprache:nor
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Zusammenfassung:Approval of hierarchy and inequality in society indexed by social dominance orientation (SDO) extends to support for human dominance over the natural world. We tested this negative association between SDO and environmentalism and the validity of the new Short Social Dominance Orientation scale in two cross-cultural samples of students (N = 4,163, k = 25) and the general population (N = 1,237, k = 10). As expected, the higher people were on SDO, the less likely they were to engage in environmental citizenship actions, pro-environmental behaviors and to donate to an environmental organization. Multilevel moderation results showed that the SDO–environmentalism relation was stronger in societies with marked societal inequality, lack of societal development and environmental standards. The interplay between individual psychological orientations and social context and the view of nature subscribed to by those high in SDO are discussed.
ISSN:1948-5506
1948-5514