FRAW Gallery: ‘Agitate, Educate, Organize!’

BOKK Journals:
‘Environmental Conservation’

The science and practice of understanding and caring for the planet in all its aspects demand the multi-faceted approach that Environmental Conservation has taken since 1973. A international and multidisciplinary journal publishing research papers, reports, comments, perspectives and subject reviews addressing any aspects of environmental conservation science, policy and practice, informed by rigorous studies from local to global scales.

This page collects all citations from this journal, providing an ‘open’ link to access that research paper where possible. The citation for each paper also lists the content of the FRAW site which references that work, with links directly to the paragraph citing the paper. This listing uses the same format as the FRAW Subject Index – and a complete table of the abbreviations used in the listing can be found on the main index page. Note, paywalled links are shown in red, and ‘open’ links are shown in blue.

Papers cited (reverse chronological order)

#chen_2016

Chen et al., Environmental Conservation, vol.43 no.2 pp.140-147, June 2016.

Sympathy for the environment predicts green consumerism but not more important environmental behaviours related to domestic energy use

Household consumption is a major contributor to global greenhouse gas emissions. Some behaviours (for example energy use and vehicle use) may have far larger impacts than others (for example green consumerism of household products). Here, the driving forces of green consumerism and two domestic energy uses (electricity consumption and vehicle fuel use) are compared. This study found that environmental attitudes predicted green consumerism, but not electricity consumption or vehicle fuel use. Furthermore, green consumerism was correlated with income and individual level demographic factors, while energy consumption was primarily predicted by household size and structural constraints. Because household energy consumption has greater environmental impacts than green consumerism, policies that aim to improve pro-environmental attitudes may not be effective in mitigating greenhouse gas emissions. Policies should rather aim to change structural constraints influencing transportation and household energy decisions and improve the conspicuousness of household energy consumption.

Referenced in: wrd-002/¶4.35