Environmental Risk Concern and Preferences for Energy-Saving Measures
- 1 July 2002
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Environment and Behavior
- Vol. 34 (4) , 455-478
- https://doi.org/10.1177/00116502034004003
Abstract
It is often assumed that higher environmental concern goes with more positive attitudes toward environmental management strategies and more environmentally friendly behavior. Cultural theory argues this relationship is more complex. Cultural theory distinguishes four ways of life, involving distinct perceptions on environmental risks (so-called myths of nature), which are accompanied by preferences for specific management strategies. The results of this study suggest that environmental concern and myths of nature are overlapping constructs. Moreover, it appeared that respondents differing in environmental concern (as measured by the New Environmental Paradigm Scale and myths of nature) varied substantially in their preferences for environmental management strategies. Respondents with a high environmental risk concern had higher preferences for behavioral change strategies and government regulation, whereas respondents with a low environmental risk concern had higher preferences for market-oriented solutions. There was a tendency of technical strategies being more preferred by respondents with a low environmental concern.Keywords
This publication has 18 references indexed in Scilit:
- Grid‐Group Theory and Political Orientations: Effects of Cultural Biases in Norway in the 1990sScandinavian Political Studies, 2000
- Energy requirements of household consumption: a case study of The NetherlandsPublished by Elsevier ,1999
- A Quantitative Test of the Cultural Theory of Risk Perceptions: Comparison with the Psychometric ParadigmRisk Analysis, 1998
- Culture and the Environment in the Pacific NorthwestAmerican Political Science Review, 1997
- The Role of Affect and Worldviews as Orienting Dispositions in the Perception and Acceptance of Nuclear Power1Journal of Applied Social Psychology, 1996
- Public Support for Environmental Protection: Objective Problems and Subjective Values in 43 SocietiesPS: Political Science and Politics, 1995
- The Social Bases of Environmental Concern: Have They Changed Over Time?1Rural Sociology, 1992
- Myths of Nature: Culture and the Social Construction of RiskJournal of Social Issues, 1992
- Orienting Dispositions in the Perception of RiskJournal of Cross-Cultural Psychology, 1991
- The “New Environmental Paradigm”The Journal of Environmental Education, 1978