Psychological barriers moderate the attitude-behavior gap for climate change

Behavioral change has been increasingly recognized as a means for combating climate change. However, being concerned about climate problems and knowing the importance of individual actions in mitigating them is not enough for greater adherence to a more sustainable lifestyle. Psychological barriers...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2023-07, Vol.18 (7), p.e0287404-e0287404
Hauptverfasser: Vieira, João, Castro, São Luís, Souza, Alessandra S
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Souza, Alessandra S
description Behavioral change has been increasingly recognized as a means for combating climate change. However, being concerned about climate problems and knowing the importance of individual actions in mitigating them is not enough for greater adherence to a more sustainable lifestyle. Psychological barriers such as (1) finding change unnecessary; (2) conflicting goals; (3) interpersonal relationships; (4) lack of knowledge; and (5) tokenism have been proposed as an explanation for the gap between environmental attitudes and actions. Yet, so far, this hypothesis has remained untested. This study aimed to assess if psychological barriers moderate the association between environmental attitudes and climate action. A sample of Portuguese individuals (N = 937) responded to a survey measuring climate change beliefs and environmental concerns as an index of environmental attitudes, a scale of self-reported frequency of environmental action, and finally, the dragons of inaction psychological barrier scale. Our participants revealed generally elevated positive environmental attitudes. These attitudes were positively and moderately related to greater self-reported frequency of environmental action in areas such as reusing materials, reduced consumption of animal products, water and energy saving, and airplane use, but not driving less. Critically, the association between attitudes and behavior was negatively moderated by psychological barriers for the reuse, food, and saving domains, but not for driving or flying. In conclusion, our results corroborate the assumption that psychological barriers can partly explain the attitude-behavior gap in the climate action domain.
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source MEDLINE; DOAJ Directory of Open Access Journals; Public Library of Science (PLoS); EZB-FREE-00999 freely available EZB journals; PubMed Central; Free Full-Text Journals in Chemistry
subjects Altruism
Animal products
Attitude
Attitudes
Behavior
Biology and Life Sciences
Carbon
Climate Change
Climatic changes
Costs
Earth Sciences
Emissions
Energy conservation
Engineering and Technology
Environmental aspects
Environmental attitudes
Environmental behavior
Environmental conditions
Environmental impact
Food
Global temperature changes
Greenhouse gases
Households
Influence
Interpersonal relations
Norms
Portugal
Reuse
Self report
Social Sciences
Surveys and Questionnaires
United Kingdom
Vegetarianism
Water conservation
title Psychological barriers moderate the attitude-behavior gap for climate change
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