New Ways to Promote Proenvironmental Behavior: Expanding and Evaluating Motives for Environmentally Responsible Behavior

This article contends that while striving to promote environmentallyresponsible behavior, we have focused attention too narrowly on just two classes of motives. There is a need to expand the range of motives available to practitioners and to provide a framework within which motives can be evaluated for both their immediate and long-term effectiveness. The article then examines a strategy for promoting environmentally responsible behavior that has significant potential. This strategy is based on a particular form of motivation called intrinsic satisfaction. Nine studies are reviewed that have outlined the structure of intrinsic satisfaction. A key theme discussed is the human inclination for competence. This fundamental human concern is shown to have both a general form and a resource-specific version.

[1]  Stuart W. Cook,et al.  Approaches to Encouraging Conservation Behavior: A Review and Conceptual Framework , 1981 .

[2]  D. Kipnis,et al.  Effects on the persuader of employing a coercive influence technique , 1994 .

[3]  J. Brehm,et al.  Psychological Reactance: A Theory of Freedom and Control , 1981 .

[4]  J. P. Rushton,et al.  Altruism and helping behavior : social, personality, and developmental perspectives , 1981 .

[5]  Changes in Self‐Perceptions as a Result of Successfully Persuading Others , 1999 .

[6]  B. Low,et al.  Population, resources, and environment: Implications of human behavioral ecology for conservation , 1993 .

[7]  R. W. White The urge towards competence. , 1971, The American journal of occupational therapy : official publication of the American Occupational Therapy Association.

[8]  I. Altman,et al.  Handbook of environmental psychology , 1987 .

[9]  P. Stern,et al.  Value Orientations, Gender, and Environmental Concern , 1993 .

[10]  R. Eckersley,et al.  Environmentalism And Political Theory: Toward An Ecocentric Approach , 1992 .

[11]  Raymond De Young,et al.  Some Psychological Aspects of RecyclingThe Structure of Conservation - Satisfactions , 1986 .

[12]  A. Wandersman User Participation , 1979 .

[13]  I. Ajzen The theory of planned behavior , 1991 .

[14]  Charles Elliott Managing the Commons , 1982 .

[15]  Michael A. Wallach,et al.  Psychology's sanction for selfishness : the error of egoism in theory and therapy , 1983 .

[16]  S. Schwartz,et al.  A Normative Decision Making Model of Altruism , 1981 .

[17]  Raymond De Young,et al.  Conservation behavior and the structure of satisfactions , 1985 .

[18]  Paul C. Stern,et al.  Psychological research and energy policy. , 1981 .

[19]  M. Mazis Antipollution measures and psychological reactance theory: A field experiment. , 1975 .

[20]  E. Geller,et al.  Actively Caring for the Environment , 1995 .

[21]  E. Scott Geller,et al.  Applied Behavior Analysis and Social Marketing: An Integration for Environmental Preservation , 1989 .

[22]  J. Brehm A theory of psychological reactance. , 1981 .

[23]  Carol M. Werner,et al.  Motivations and behaviors that support recycling , 1998 .

[24]  Douglas S. Noonan,et al.  Managing the Commons , 1978 .

[25]  D. Crocker,et al.  Ethics of Consumption: The Good Life, Justice, and Global Stewardship , 2000 .

[26]  Stuart Oskamp,et al.  Factors Influencing Household Recycling Behavior , 1991 .

[27]  White Rw The urge towards competence. , 1971 .

[28]  Jane Mansbridge,et al.  Beyond self-interest , 1991 .

[29]  John D. Cone,et al.  Environmental Problems/Behavioral Solutions , 1980 .

[30]  R. D. Charms Personal Causation: The Internal Affective Determinants of Behavior , 1983 .

[31]  James B. Allen,et al.  Environmental Locus of Control, Sympathy, and Proenvironmental Behavior , 1999 .

[32]  Raymond De Young,et al.  Encouraging Environmentally Appropriate Behavior: The Role of Intrinsic Motivation , 1985 .

[33]  R. D. Young,et al.  Intrinsic satisfaction derived from office recycling behavior: A case study in Taiwan , 1994 .

[34]  Self-interest and personal responsibility redux. , 1987 .

[35]  C. Holahan Cognition and Environment: Functioning in an Uncertain World. , 1984 .

[36]  A. Kaplan,et al.  From passive to active about solar electricity: innovation decision process and photovoltaic interest generation , 1999 .

[37]  SlEphen Kaplan,et al.  BEING NEEDED, ADAPTIVE MUDDLING AND HUMAN-ENVIRONMENT RELATIONSHIPS , 1990 .

[38]  P. Stern,et al.  The Value Basis of Environmental Concern , 1994 .

[39]  Frank C. Leeming,et al.  Critical Review of Behavioral Interventions to Preserve the Environment , 1993 .

[40]  David B. Gray,et al.  Ecological Beliefs and Behaviors: Assessment and Change , 1985 .

[41]  I. Ajzen,et al.  Understanding Attitudes and Predicting Social Behavior , 1980 .

[42]  R. W. White Motivation reconsidered: the concept of competence. , 1959, Psychological review.

[43]  Sam D. Sieber Fatal Remedies: The Ironies of Social Intervention , 1981 .

[44]  E. Geller,et al.  Integrating Behaviorism and Humanism for Environmental Protection , 1995 .

[45]  Raymond De Young,et al.  Exploring the Difference Between Recyclers and Non-Recyclers: The Role of Information , 1988 .

[46]  M. Appley,et al.  Adaptation-level theory : a symposium , 1971 .

[47]  M. Snyder,et al.  Sustained helping without obligation: motivation, longevity of service, and perceived attitude change among AIDS volunteers. , 1995, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[48]  Mark Snyder,et al.  The Motivations to Volunteer , 1999 .

[49]  R. Marans,et al.  Factors Influencing Individual Recycling Behavior in Office Settings , 1995 .

[50]  Mary Midgley,et al.  Beast and Man: The Roots of Human Nature , 1980 .

[51]  E S Geller,et al.  Reaction to Willems and McIntire’s Review of “Preserving the environment: New strategies for behavior change” , 1984, The Behavior analyst.

[52]  H. L. Leff,et al.  Cognitive Set and Environmental Awareness , 1974 .

[53]  Suzanne C. Thompson,et al.  Ecocentric and anthropocentric attitudes toward the environment , 1994 .

[54]  J. Reich,et al.  Reactance and Norm Appeal in Anti‐Littering Messages , 1979 .

[55]  R. Katzev,et al.  Promoting energy conservation: An analysis of behavioral research , 1987 .

[56]  M. Lepper,et al.  The Hidden costs of reward : new perspectives on the psychology of human motivation , 1978 .

[57]  E. Geller Solving environmental problems: A behavior change perspective. , 1992 .

[58]  D. Campbell,et al.  Hedonic relativism and planning the good society , 1971 .

[59]  Thomas Dietz,et al.  Values, Beliefs, and Proenvironmental Action: Attitude Formation Toward Emergent Attitude Objects1 , 1995 .

[60]  Uriel G. Foa,et al.  Interpersonal and Economic Resources , 1971, Science.

[61]  Victor Corral-Verdugo,et al.  DUAL ‘REALITIES’ OF CONSERVATION BEHAVIOR: SELF-REPORTS VS OBSERVATIONS OF RE-USE AND RECYCLING BEHAVIOR , 1997 .

[62]  R. D. Young,et al.  Changing Behavior and Making it Stick The Conceptualization and Management of Conservation Behavior , 1993 .

[63]  M. Snyder,et al.  Who helps and why? The psychology of AIDS volunteerism. , 1992 .