Abstract

Habits are the fundamental basis for many of our daily actions and can be powerful barriers to behavioural change. Still, habits are not included in most narratives, theories, and interventions applied to sustainable behaviour. One reason societies struggle to reach policy goals and people fail to change towards more pro-environmental lifestyles might be that many behaviours are now bound by strong habits that override knowledge and intentions to act. In this perspective article, we provide three arguments for why pro-environmental habits are a needed research agenda in sustainability science: (1) habit theory highlights how behaviour is heavily reliant on automatic processes, (2) the environmental context sets boundary conditions for behaviour, shape habits, and cues action responses, and (3) our habits and past behaviour shape our values and self-identity. These arguments highlight the transformative potential of looking at sustainable behaviours through a habit lens. We believe a research agenda on pro-environmental habits could generate a more holistic understanding of sustainable behaviours and complement today’s dominating approaches which emphasize reasoned decisions and intrinsic motivations such as values, norms, and intentions to understand and predict pro-environmental behaviour. We highlight evident knowledge gaps and practical benefits of considering habit theory to promote pro-environmental behaviours, and how habit architecture could be utilized as a strong leverage point when designing, modifying, and building urban environments.

Highlights

  • Human behaviour is at the root of most environmental challenges we face today

  • Habits are the fundamental basis for many daily actions and can be powerful barriers to change, once habits take shape they persist without much deliberation or re-consideration (Wood and Runger 2016)

  • It is the decisions that we make today that form the wide foundation of our unsustainable behaviours, but the decisions we once took that are solidified in strong habits and lifestyles

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Human behaviour is at the root of most environmental challenges we face today. To reach sustainability targets and ensure a safe operating space for humanity on earth, rapid behaviour changes are needed across scales ranging from individuals to leaders on all levels of society (Steffen et al 2015; UN General Assembly 2015). McEachan et al 2016) They seldom paint the full picture and people often fail to align knowledge and internal motivations with sustainable actions (Kollmuss and Agyeman 2002; Steg and Vlek 2009). Such value/attitude– action gaps (Blake 1999) mean that even though an individual possesses intrinsic motivation she will not necessarily manifest such motivational drive in proenvironmental behaviours. Our search indicates a seeming lack of scientific interest in the role of habits in relation to sustainable actions from most scholars This is surprising considering the powerful influence habit can have on behaviours that must radically change in the near future. Research gaps, and argue for the potential of focussing more on breaking habits and on building PEH when designing and modifying the built environment

OUR RELIANCE ON HABITS
Ways to break or create habits
Implementation intention
Habit discontinuity hypothesis
Findings
THREE ARGUMENTS FOR STUDYING PROENVIRONMENTAL HABITS
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