Disability and going green: a comparison of the environmental values and behaviours of persons with and without disability |
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Authors: | Brent Lovelock |
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Affiliation: | Centre for Recreation Research, Department of Tourism, School of Business , University of Otago , PO Box 56 , Dunedin , New Zealand |
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Abstract: | Some studies have suggested that socially excluded groups exhibit different environmental values and behaviours from mainstream society. To consider this in the context of disability, a survey was implemented to investigate environmental values and ecological behaviour. A high percentage of participants considered themselves to have a disability, long‐standing illness or infirmity. Over half of the sample had restricted physical mobility. The study used the revised New Ecological Paradigm Scale, a widely used measure of pro‐environmental orientation, and the General Ecological Behaviour scale to assess ecological behaviours. No significant differences were found between respondents with/without disability for either their general environmental attitudes or their general ecological behaviour. However, a positive correlation was found between level of physical mobility and general ecological behaviour. The results also show significant differences in the ecological behaviours of those respondents living dependently and those living independently; respondents living in care scored lower on the ecological behaviour scale. |
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Keywords: | environmental values ecological behaviour disability mobility New Ecological Paradigm |
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