Environmental Sustainability and Pro-environmental Behavior
A special issue of International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health (ISSN 1660-4601). This special issue belongs to the section "Environmental Health".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (31 March 2023) | Viewed by 36660
Special Issue Editors
Interests: decision-making process; environmental protection behavior
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
As one of the major crises of our time, climate change poses a massive threat to human beings worldwide (UNEP, 2015), and the positive action in response to this challenge, including mitigation and adaptation, requires every sector of society. Sustainable concerns have also led to greater environmental awareness in academia and business practice in recent decades (e.g., Ngo et al., 2018; Taken and Brower, 2012). A growing list of countries has committed to a net-zero emission or carbon neutrality by the middle of this century. The process has gained increasing recognition that public engagement is a vital force besides economic, political, and technological systems, given that carbon emission from individual daily life accounts for approximately 65% of the total emission globally.
According to the Emissions Gap Report 2020 released by the United Nations Environment Program (UNEP), greener individual and household lifestyles would significantly mitigate climate change. The lifestyles include sustainable ways of mobility (e.g., taking public transportation), residential energy use (e.g., using renewable energy), and food choice (e.g., choosing organic food). Although we have seen an increasing number of studies on environmental sustainability in academia, the research seems still complicated and needed (Kumar and Polonsky, 2017; Leonidou and Leonidou, 2011; Tilikidou and Delistavrou, 2014; Yue et al, 2021). On the one hand, straightforward communication and education targeting the public are less than desirable since climate change is a remote psychological event that does not elicit the individual perception of “happening now, here and to me.” This psychological distance hardly makes individuals take environmental issues as their responsibility. On the other hand, the prevalent “attitude-behavior” gap indicates non-negligible barriers in carrying out actual green behaviors when people are equipped with a suite of professional knowledge and high sustainable intention.
This Special Issue focuses on the theoretical and practical innovation in exploring the mechanism of environmental sustainability and pro-environmental behaviors. Research from the perspectives of individuals, corporates, NGOs, institutional organizations, and governments, or with an integrated view, is all welcomed. Original research articles (quantitative and qualitative), meta-analyses, and review articles related to this topic will all be considered.
Potential themes relevant to this Special Issue may include, but are not limited to, the following:
- Green lifestyle (individual or household);
- Theoretical progress of pro-environmental behaviors;
- Political revolutions to drive environmental sustainability transformation;
- Cross-cultural comparison of green marketing;
- Gender difference in pro-environmental behaviors;
- Consumer recycling and conservation behavior;
- The impact of green marketing strategies;
- The role of social media in environmental information and education program;
- Environmentally sustainable behavior and public policy;
- Development and validation of an integrative model for explaining pro-environmental behavior;
- Green strategy;
- Green brands/products/services.
References
- Kumar, P., & Polonsky, M. J. (2017). An Analysis of the Green Consumer Domain within Sustainability Research: 1975 to 2014. Australasian Marketing Journal, 25(2), 85-96.
- Leonidou, C. N., & Leonidou, L. C. (2011). Research into Environmental Marketing/Management: A Bibliographic Analysis. European Journal of Marketing, 45(1-2), 68-103.
- Ngo, T., Lohmann, G., & Hales, R. (2018). Collaborative marketing for the
- sustainable development of community-based tourism enterprises: voices from
- the field. Journal of Sustainable Tourism, 26(8), 1325-1343.
- Taken Smith, K., Brower, T. 2012. Longitudinal study of green marketing strategies that influence millennials. Journal of Strategic Marketing, 20(6), pp.535-551.
- Tilikidou, I., & Delistavrou, A. (2014). Pro-Environmental Purchasing Behaviour During the Economic Crisis. Marketing Intelligence & Planning, 32(2), 160-173.
- United Nations Environment Programme. (2020). Emissions gap report 2020. Nairobi.
- United Nations Environment Programme. (2015). UNEP 2014 Annual Report. Retrieved 29 August 2021, from United Nations Environment Programme http://www.unep.org/annualreport/2015/en/index.h tml
- Yue, D. , Tong, Z. , Tian, J. , Li, Y. , & Sun, Y. . (2021). Anthropomorphic strategies promote wildlife conservation through empathy: the moderation role of the public epidemic situation. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 18(7), 3565.
Dr. Yan Sun
Dr. Yan Meng
Guest Editors
Manuscript Submission Information
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Keywords
- environmental sustainability
- pro-environmental behaviors
- green lifestyle
- green strategy
- recycling and conservation behavior
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