Collective Action, Environmental Activism, and Air Quality Policy
This article attempts to respond to Ostrom's call for a behavioral model of collective action by generalizing the collective interest model of mass political action to explain citizen policy support and personal behavioral intentions in the context of air quality policy. The collective action p...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Political research quarterly 2006-03, Vol.59 (1), p.149-160 |
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description | This article attempts to respond to Ostrom's call for a behavioral model of collective action by generalizing the collective interest model of mass political action to explain citizen policy support and personal behavioral intentions in the context of air quality policy. The collective action problems inherent in air quality policy provide a critical research setting for testing hypotheses of the collective interest model. Key elements of the collective interest model-perceived risk, trust in policy elites, knowledge of the policy problem, and efficacy-are found to be directly, and positively, related to support of government policies and intentions to engage in personal behaviors that might improve air quality. The article discusses the implications for using the collective interest model as general behavioral theory of collective action. |
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source | SAGE Complete A-Z List; Jstor Complete Legacy; Political Science Complete; PAIS Index; Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; Alma/SFX Local Collection |
subjects | Air pollution Air quality Behavior modeling Behavioral sciences Behaviorism Collective Action Environmental education Environmental justice Environmental policy Environmental Protection Environmentalists Expected values Hypothesis testing Modeling Pollution Social activism Social Movements United States environmental policy |
title | Collective Action, Environmental Activism, and Air Quality Policy |
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