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The New Ecological Paradigm in Social-Psychological Context
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References
1995
Year
Behavioral Decision MakingEnvironmental PsychologyLawEnvironmental ConcernSocial-ecological SystemAttitude FormationSocial SciencesEnvironmental EthicsPsychologyEcological PsychologyEcology (Indigenous Studies)Environmental BehaviorSocial-ecological SystemsEnvironmental ManagementBehavioral SciencesEnvironmental KnowledgeSocial EcologyApplied Social PsychologyEnvironmental JusticeSocial BehaviorSocio-environmental ImplicationPro-environmental BehaviorNew Ecological Paradigm
The New Ecological Paradigm (NEP) scale is the most frequently used measure of environmental concern, but it has not been placed in the context of a social-psychological theory of attitude formation or attitude-behavior relationships. Using data from a northern Virginia sample, this study examines NEP in relation to the variables in a theoretical model of environmental concern. We found that the NEP is indistinguishable from a scale of awareness of consequences (AC) of general environmental conditions, both psychometrically and in terms of its relations to behavioral intentions, but somewhat different in its relations to basic value orientations and sociodemographic variables. We conclude that both NEP and AC measure generalized beliefs about the nature of human-environment interactions-or "folk ecology"—a set of beliefs that may be influenced by social structure and values and that influence attitudes, beliefs, and behavioral intentions regarding specific environmental conditions.
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