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Rational and Moral Antecedents of Tourists’ Intention to Use Reusable Alternatives to Single-Use Plastics

Issahaku Adam

2022Journal of Travel Research29 citationsDOI

Abstract

Though rational and moral antecedents to tourists’ pro-environmental behavioral intentions have been separately established, the literature remains inconclusive on whether tourists’ pro-environmental intentions are underpinned by rational or moral considerations. Based on the theory of planned behavior and the norm activation model, this study examines the competing rational and moral antecedents of intention to use reusable alternatives to single-use plastics using data obtained from 653 tourists and analyzed with the structural equation modeling. The results indicate that though morality better explained the intention to use reusable alternatives to single-use plastics amongst all tourists, rationality underpinned the intention amongst domestic tourists while morality better explained the intentions of international tourists. The implications of these findings regarding future theorization of tourists’ pro-environmental behavior and measures to reduce single-use plastic marine pollution in coastal destinations are discussed.

Topics & Concepts

RationalityMoralityStructural equation modelingSocial psychologyDestinationsNorm (philosophy)PsychologyLegal normTourismTheory of planned behaviorMarketingBusinessEconomicsPolitical scienceComputer scienceMachine learningControl (management)LawManagementEnvironmental Education and SustainabilityEnvironmental Sustainability in BusinessMunicipal Solid Waste Management
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