From plastic bottle recycling to policy support: An experimental test of pro-environmental spillover

Little research has investigated the extent to which performance of one pro-environmental behavior (PEB) spills over to increase or decrease support for pro-environmental policies or the mechanisms underlying spillover effects. In this study, 283 U.S. university students were randomly assigned via s...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of environmental psychology 2016-06, Vol.46, p.55-66
Hauptverfasser: Truelove, Heather Barnes, Yeung, Kam Leung, Carrico, Amanda R., Gillis, Ashley J., Raimi, Kaitlin Toner
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container_end_page 66
container_issue
container_start_page 55
container_title Journal of environmental psychology
container_volume 46
creator Truelove, Heather Barnes
Yeung, Kam Leung
Carrico, Amanda R.
Gillis, Ashley J.
Raimi, Kaitlin Toner
description Little research has investigated the extent to which performance of one pro-environmental behavior (PEB) spills over to increase or decrease support for pro-environmental policies or the mechanisms underlying spillover effects. In this study, 283 U.S. university students were randomly assigned via situational manipulations to either recycle a water bottle, throw the bottle in the trash, or a control condition. All participants then completed surveys assessing environmental identity, guilt, and environmental worry, as well as support for a pro-environmental campus green fund. Results showed evidence for negative spillover among Democrats only, which was mediated by environmental identity: Democrats who recycled the water bottle had lower environmental identities and were less supportive of the green fund than those in the control condition. Neither Republicans nor Independents displayed spillover. The results have implications for those interested in increasing small, easy PEBs in hopes of gaining future support for environmental policies. •Negative spillover was found between recycling and environmental policy support.•For Democrats, recycling lowered environmental identities and later policy support.•Neither Republicans nor Independents displayed spillover.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.jenvp.2016.03.004
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source Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals
subjects Bottles
Guilt
Identity
Moral licensing
Policies
Pro-environmental behavior
Psychology
Recycled
Recycling
Spillover
Spills
Students
Universities
title From plastic bottle recycling to policy support: An experimental test of pro-environmental spillover
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