Abstract

Research suggests that behavior change programs can be fast and cost-effective solutions to plastic pollution alongside traditional environmental policy-making. Furthermore, encouraging change in perception and behavior can be a tool to change consumption and waste handling towards increased circularity, which is of high concern in the EU. Beyond knowledge, predictors of pro-environmental behavior include concern, social norms, nature-connectedness, identity and self-efficacy. Citizen Science (CS) as a way to raise awareness and potentially change behavior show promise within plastic litter monitoring. We tested the feasibility of evaluating a nation-wide citizen science intervention, ‘the Mass Experiment’ (ME), with school students (age 7-16) in Denmark. With more than 57,000 students signed up for ME, this is to our knowledge one of the largest CS activity on plastic debris targeting young people. As an addition to the core CS activity we developed a voluntary and anonymous questionnaire to study the perceptions and behaviors of the students. We hypothesized that the intervention would increase risk perception, self-efficacy and empowerment as well as self-reported actions. Through 931 pre-surveys and 838 post-surveys aggregated at the team level (n = 48), we found that the intervention had no significant overall effect on team, risk-perception, pro-environmental behaviors, nor self-efficacy or empowerment. However, unexpected patterns emerged for age effects, potentially advising some caution over the design of such CS activities particularly for younger children. We discuss methodological limitations, the high baseline for nearly all variables, the Danish context and the intervention itself and make recommendations for studying future CS interventions.

Highlights

  • IntroductionIn Europe, the European Commission has published the European Strategy for Plastics in a Circular Economy (2018), aiming to guide all steps of the plastic value chain onto a circular path, including improved waste handling to increase recycling

  • Through 931 pre-surveys and 838 post-surveys aggregated at the team level (n = 48), we found that the intervention had no significant overall effect on team, risk-perception, pro-environmental behaviors, nor self-efficacy or empowerment

  • This order applies to the pre as well as the post Mass Experiment (ME) data, which indicates that the students perceived plastic pollution as the most important issue of the three

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Summary

Introduction

In Europe, the European Commission has published the European Strategy for Plastics in a Circular Economy (2018), aiming to guide all steps of the plastic value chain onto a circular path, including improved waste handling to increase recycling. This has been the aim of regulations such as the Single Use Plastic Directive, proposed by the European Commission in 2018 as well as the EU Directive from 2015 targeting consumption of lightweight plastic bags.

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