Values, Beliefs, and Proenvironmental Action: Attitude Formation Toward Emergent Attitude Objects1
- 1 September 1995
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of Applied Social Psychology
- Vol. 25 (18) , 1611-1636
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1559-1816.1995.tb02636.x
Abstract
Discoveries in environmental science become the raw material for constructing social attitude objects, individual attitudes, and broad public concerns. We explored a model in which individuals construct attitudes to new or emergent attitude objects by referencing personal values and beliefs about the consequences of the objects for their values. We found that a subset of the major clusters identified in value theory is associated with willingness to take proenvironmental action; that a biospheric value orientation cannot yet be discerned in a general population sample; that willingness to take proenvironmental action is a function of both values and beliefs, with values also predicting beliefs; and that gender differences can be attributed to both beliefs and values. Our model has promise for explicating the factors determining public concern with environmental conditions.Keywords
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