Anxiety about environmental hazards among teenagers in Helsinki, Moscow and Tallinn

Comparative research of environmental attitudes has concentrated on adults of Western countries, whereas knowledge of environmental consciousness of East European people is modest. This article compares anxiety that teenagers in Helsinki, Moscow and Tallinn express about environmental hazards and th...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Science of the total environment 1999-08, Vol.234 (1), p.95-107
Hauptverfasser: Hokka, Päivi, Palosuo, Hannele, Zhuravleva, Irina, Pärna, Kersti, Mussalo-Rauhamaa, Helena, Lakomova, Nina
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Comparative research of environmental attitudes has concentrated on adults of Western countries, whereas knowledge of environmental consciousness of East European people is modest. This article compares anxiety that teenagers in Helsinki, Moscow and Tallinn express about environmental hazards and their health effects. The data (Helsinki, N=1396; Moscow, N=618; Tallinn, N=1268) were collected in schools by questionnaires from pupils between 13 and 18 years in 1994–1995. Air pollution, water pollution and survival of plant and animal species were considered most worrying environmental threats in every city. Environmental concern was usually highest in Moscow, but the effects of pollution on an individual’s health worried Estonian teenagers most. The worry was most consistent in Moscow, where sex, class level or opinion of the state of one's own living environment did not usually have an effect on attitudes. Finnish girls and pupils in higher school classes were environmentally more conscious than boys or younger teenagers. In Tallinn, the sex and age differences in worry were smaller. Environmental worry seemed to have connections to a general sense of responsibility and risk behaviour such as heavy drinking and smoking. For all sites those pupils who often throw empty packages onto the street or into the nature expressed lower environmental concern than their more responsible peers. The differences of worry between the cities were difficult to interpret, but the greater total concern of young Muscovites may be part of their general social anxiety, which is associated with the instability of the Russian society.
ISSN:0048-9697
1879-1026
DOI:10.1016/S0048-9697(99)00117-5