Litcius/Paper detail

The role of national identity in collective pro-environmental action

Taciano L. Milfont, Danny Osborne, Kumar Yogeeswaran, Chris G. Sibley

2020Journal of Environmental Psychology74 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Both individual and collective actions are needed to address global environmental changes. Contributing to a growing literature on the collective dimension of pro-environmental actions, we examined the role of national identity in mobilizing environmental norms and pro-environmental tendencies. Latent profile analysis with a large national dataset (N = 13,942) revealed five profiles underlying participants' views of attributes necessary for being a ‘true’ New Zealander. Four profiles containing over 89% of participants placed high importance on having a clean-and-green attitude as a core component of national identity, confirming that environmentalism is part of New Zealand's zeitgeist. Importantly, believing that New Zealand has a superordinate environmental identity was associated with both individual pro-environmental tendencies and collective pro-environmental actions (i.e., support for government regulation of carbon emissions and subsidisation of public transport), both cross-sectionally and longitudinally. Forging national environmental identities and norms are thus important, yet vastly underutilised, pathways to mobilise pro-environmental collective action.

Topics & Concepts

Collective actionAction (physics)Identity (music)Collective identitySocial psychologyPsychologyPolitical sciencePoliticsArtLawAestheticsPhysicsQuantum mechanicsEnvironmental Education and SustainabilityEnvironmental Philosophy and EthicsTourism, Volunteerism, and Development