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Does government environmental governance information disclosure improve residents’ subjective well-being? Evidence from China

Jiusong Chen, Shanyong Wang, Liang Wan

2022Journal of Environmental Planning and Management18 citationsDOI

Abstract

To deal with environmental deterioration issues, various regulations and laws have been implemented by the Chinese government, including disclosing environmental governance information to the public to increase environmental transparency. This has not only affected the environmental governance performance but also residents’ subjective well-being. This research aims to investigate whether, how and when government environmental governance information disclosure affects residents’ subjective well-being in China. Data were gathered from 537 respondents and the analysis revealed that government environmental governance information disclosure exerts a significantly positive effect on residents’ subjective well-being, mainly by reducing risk perception and improving perceived controllability. Furthermore, the result found that the positive influence of government environmental governance information disclosure on residents’ subjective well-being depends on information credibility. Information credibility strengthens the effect of government environmental governance information disclosure. According to the findings, relevant recommendations to perfect government environmental governance information disclosure and improve residents’ subjective well-being were provided.

Topics & Concepts

ChinaCorporate governanceGovernment (linguistics)BusinessEnvironmental governanceEnvironmental economicsEnvironmental planningNatural resource economicsPublic economicsEnvironmental resource managementEconomicsPolitical scienceFinanceEnvironmental scienceLawPhilosophyLinguisticsEnvironmental Education and SustainabilityEnvironmental Sustainability in BusinessEnergy, Environment, Economic Growth
Does government environmental governance information disclosure improve residents’ subjective well-being? Evidence from China | Litcius