Title of article :
Conflicting social norms and community conservation compliance
Author/Authors :
McDonald، نويسنده , , Rachel I. and Fielding، نويسنده , , Kelly S. and Louis، نويسنده , , Winnifred R. and Hornsey، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2014
Pages :
5
From page :
212
To page :
216
Abstract :
Though the success of conservation initiatives relies on changing behaviour, little social psychological research has examined factors such as attitudes and social norms in the context of actual conservation campaigns. In the context of reducing light pollution around sea turtle nesting habitats, researching technological solutions has clear merit. Problems such as light glow are, however, fundamentally about human behaviour, and so finding ways to effect behavioural change is critical. Social norms, or perceptions about what other people think and do, have been widely used in behaviour change campaigns across various domains, including campaigns to promote conservation behaviour. Here, we investigate how the norms of different groups may influence our behaviour in the context of a campaign to alter behavioural norms about light glow pollution in a community. We examine attitudes, social norms, and the degree of conflict (versus congruence) between the behaviours of different groups, and their relationship with intentions to engage in conservation behaviours relevant to sea turtle conservation. We show that attitudes and norms are related to behavioural intentions, and conflicts between social norms influence intentions, over and above the norms themselves. This highlights an important consideration for conservation campaigns utilising social norms-based behaviour change appeals.
Keywords :
behaviour change , Norm-conflict , Sea turtle conservation , social norms
Journal title :
Journal for Nature Conservation
Serial Year :
2014
Journal title :
Journal for Nature Conservation
Record number :
2231616
Link To Document :
بازگشت