Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

I Am What I Am, by Looking Past the Present

2013; SAGE Publishing; Volume: 46; Issue: 5 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1177/0013916512475209

ISSN

1552-390X

Autores

Ellen van der Werff, Linda Steg, Kees Keizer,

Tópico(s)

Climate Change Communication and Perception

Resumo

A strong environmental self-identity increases the likelihood of a wide range of proenvironmental actions. But which factors influence identity and can we strengthen it? We propose that the environmental self-identity depends on biospheric values and on past behavior and that the strength of one’s environmental self-identity can be changed somewhat by reminding people of their past environmental behavior. We tested our model in a series of studies and show that biospheric values and past environmental behavior influence the environmental self-identity, which is in turn related to subsequent environmental judgments and intentions. Furthermore, we found that although the strength of the environmental self-identity changed when we reminded people of their past environmental actions, biospheric values remained an important predictor of self-identity, suggesting that the environmental self-identity has a stable core. Our results further suggest that environmental-friendly behavior can be promoted by reminding people of their past proenvironmental actions as this will strengthen one’s environmental self-identity.

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