Taking environmental action: the role of local composition, context, and collective

Publication type
Journal article
Authors
Wakefield SE, Elliott SJ, Eyles J, Cole DC
Date published
2006 Jan 01
Journal
Environmental Management
Volume
37
Issue
1
Pages
40-53
PMID
16328677
Open Access?
No
Abstract

This article explores individual and community action taken in response to perceived environmental risks by investigating the determinants of environmental action across a range of action types. A conceptual framework is first presented, which provides a foundation for investigating the role of local compositional (i.e., individual characteristics), contextual (i.e., neighborhood environment), and collective (i.e., social networks) factors in environmental action. To test the utility of the conceptual framework, a quantitative survey was administered to a random sample of households (n = 512) in Hamilton, Canada. The results suggest that the predictors of environmental action vary by action type (i.e., personal change, individual civic action, and cooperative civic action), and that factors related to perceived environmental exposure and social capital generally play a stronger, more consistent role in civic environmental action than sociodemographic or neighborhood factors. The results underscore the role of social connection in responses to perceived environmental risks