Abstract

Environmental problems rooted in human behaviors have been the major obstacles to sustainable development in many countries. The promotion of residents’ pro-environmental behaviors may serve to mitigate environmental problems. In this paper, we understand residents’ pro-environmental behaviors from the perspective of social interaction. We distinguish between low-cost and high-cost pro-environmental behaviors and analyze to what extent social interaction may affect the two types of pro-environmental behaviors and whether conformity plays a mediation role, using the Chinese General Social Survey in 2013. We find that frequent social interaction increases residents’ low-cost pro-environmental behaviors but decreases residents’ high-cost pro-environmental behaviors. Conformity has no mediation role for low-cost pro-environmental behaviors but has a full mediation role for high-cost pro-environmental behaviors. We conclude that residents have a strong tendency to conform to the behavioral patterns of the social majority when such conformity can save their time, effort, or financial cost. To promote residents’ pro-environmental behaviors, their enforcement cost for the residents should be taken into account and adaptive policy instruments should be developed for different types of pro-environmental behaviors.

Highlights

  • The overexploitation of natural resources has raised many environmental problems, e.g., air pollution, soil degradation, water shortages, waste accumulation, and loss of biodiversity

  • We find that social interaction has a positive impact on low-cost pro-environmental behaviors

  • We find that social interaction has a negative impact on high-cost pro-environmental behaviors

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The overexploitation of natural resources has raised many environmental problems, e.g., air pollution, soil degradation, water shortages, waste accumulation, and loss of biodiversity. Such environmental problems may hurt residents’ health (Matus et al, 2012; Liu et al, 2020a), reduce labor productivity (Zivin and Neidell, 2012), and threaten the sustainability of economics and society in the long run (Liu and Yu, 2020). Many studies have investigated the importance of internal factors of residents’ pro-environmental behaviors, mainly derived from psychological theories, such as the Theory of Planned Behavior or the Social Interaction and Pro-Environmental Behaviors. The role of social interaction in pro-environmental behaviors has been paid limited attention. As an exception, Miller and Buys (2008) found that residents who kept a close connection with others in the community tended to wash their cars in a more environmentally friendly way. Videras et al (2012) found that social relationship matters for working with others in the community to solve a local environmental problem, volunteering in environmental protection projects, and recycling. Macias and Williams (2014) found that time spent with neighbors can significantly increase residents’ pro-environmental lifestyles

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call