Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5034880 | Journal of Environmental Psychology | 2017 | 8 Pages |
â¢Identity was considered as a factor which drives pro-environmental behaviours.â¢Effects of pro-environmental self-identity was tested with a within-subjects approach.â¢The moderating role of self-identity in predicting environmental behaviour was tested.â¢Self-identity moderated the impact of perceived behavioural control on intentions.â¢Self-identity moderated the effect of past behaviour on intentions and behaviours.
Self-identity is considered as a useful additional predictor in the theory of planned behaviour (TPB). However, previous research generally assessed the impact of pro-environmental self-identity in relation to single behaviours and no studies considered its potential role in moderating the impact of other predictors on behaviour. The present research used a within-persons approach to examine effects across behaviours and a longitudinal design to assess the moderating role of self-identity in the prediction of intentions and behaviours, controlling for past behaviour. Participants (NÂ =Â 240) completed Time 1 questionnaires measuring TPB constructs in relation to five different pro-environmental behaviours. Two weeks later, participants (NÂ =Â 220) responded to a questionnaire assessing self-reports of these behaviours during the intervening two-week period. Across pro-environmental behaviours the findings showed that pro-environmental self-identity significantly moderated the impact of perceived behavioural control on intentions and the effect of past behaviour on both intentions and behaviours.