Expanding and Evaluating Motives for Environmentally Responsible Behavior
De Young, Raymond (2000). Expanding and evaluating motives for environmentally responsible behavior.
. Journal of Social Issues, 56, 3, 509-526.
This article contends that while striving to promote environmentally responsible behavior, we have focused attention too narrowly on just 2 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.