Ecological Behavior, Environmental Attitude, and Feelings of Responsibility for the Environment

Kaiser, F. G., Ranney, M., Hartig, T. & Bowler, P. A. (1999). Ecological behavior, environmental attitude, and feelings of responsibility for the environment. European Psychologist, 4, 2, 59-74.

Rational-choice theories insufficiently explain behaviors that are at least partially moral, such as ecological behavior. The present paper establishes an expanded rational-choice model of environmental attitude that extends into the moral domain by using feelings of personal obligation toward the environment (i.e., feelings of responsibility) as an additional predictor of intentions to behave ecologically. Findings from 2 studies are presented, In Study 1, a sample of 436 Swiss adults (aged 20-82 yrs) was used to test the proposed model. Study 2 replicates the findings of Study 1 with a sample of 488 California college students (aged 17-50 yrs). Assessments were carried out in a structural equation modeling framework. Environmental knowledge, environmental values, and responsibility feelings together explained 45% of the variance (50% in Study 2) of ecological behavior intention which, in turn, predicted 76% (94% in Study 2) of the explainable variance of general ecological behavior. As the inclusion of responsibility feelings increased the proportion of explained variance of ecological behavior intention by 5% (10% in Study 2) above and beyond a more basic attitude model, the moral extension of the proposed attitude model is largely supported.

Find this article online
Site Courtesy of
McKenzie-Mohr & Associates

Expertise in Community-Based Social Marketing