TY - JOUR
T1 - The value of eudaimonia for understanding relationships among values and pro-environmental behavior
AU - Shin, Seunguk
AU - van Riper, Carena J.
AU - Stedman, Richard C.
AU - Suski, Cory D.
N1 - Funding for this research was provided by the Great Lakes Fishery Commission (contract: 2018_VAN_44076 ), USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture Hatch program (accession #: 1012211 ), and the National Great Rivers Research and Education Center . We would like to thank the Great Lakes Fishery Commission Lake Committee managers for feedback during various phases of this research. We are also grateful for contributions from collaborators Elizabeth Golebie and Max Eriksson, as well as undergraduate research assistants David Nguyen, Delta Zhang, Megan Gaddy, Venus Apantenco, and Yen-Hsuan Chang. The reviewers of this article were also very helpful in refining our interpretation of the literature.
Funding for this research was provided by the Great Lakes Fishery Commission (contract: 2018_VAN_44076), USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture Hatch program (accession #: 1012211), and the National Great Rivers Research and Education Center. We would like to thank the Great Lakes Fishery Commission Lake Committee managers for feedback during various phases of this research. We are also grateful for contributions from collaborators Elizabeth Golebie and Max Eriksson, as well as undergraduate research assistants David Nguyen, Delta Zhang, Megan Gaddy, Venus Apantenco, and Yen-Hsuan Chang. The reviewers of this article were also very helpful in refining our interpretation of the literature.
PY - 2022/4
Y1 - 2022/4
N2 - Understanding the transactions that occur between humans and their environments requires research focused on phenomena that explain behavioral patterns, particularly values that serve as guiding principles in life. Mounting evidence has suggested that pro-environmental behavior is motivated by the long-term goal of living a meaningful life, as reflected by Aristotle's concept of eudaimonia. However, the relationships among value concepts, particularly eudaimonic values, remains unclear despite the fundamental role that these constructs play in explaining why people make behavioral decisions. We conceptualized eudaimonic values with guidance from Self-Determination Theory to understand how a suite of values affected pro-environmental behavior reported by recreational anglers (n = 1,103) across five US states (Wisconsin, Illinois, Michigan, New York, Indiana) in the Great Lakes region. Results from a latent variable path model showed that eudaimonic values were strong predictors of biospheric, altruistic, egoistic, and hedonic values, which in turn, influenced self-reported behavior among recreational anglers who were at risk of spreading aquatic invasive species. These findings suggest that eudaimonic values are an antecedent to values-behavior relationships and can improve the predictive capacity of models being developed to inform management strategies for minimizing human activities that are contributing to the unintentional spread of aquatic invasive species.
AB - Understanding the transactions that occur between humans and their environments requires research focused on phenomena that explain behavioral patterns, particularly values that serve as guiding principles in life. Mounting evidence has suggested that pro-environmental behavior is motivated by the long-term goal of living a meaningful life, as reflected by Aristotle's concept of eudaimonia. However, the relationships among value concepts, particularly eudaimonic values, remains unclear despite the fundamental role that these constructs play in explaining why people make behavioral decisions. We conceptualized eudaimonic values with guidance from Self-Determination Theory to understand how a suite of values affected pro-environmental behavior reported by recreational anglers (n = 1,103) across five US states (Wisconsin, Illinois, Michigan, New York, Indiana) in the Great Lakes region. Results from a latent variable path model showed that eudaimonic values were strong predictors of biospheric, altruistic, egoistic, and hedonic values, which in turn, influenced self-reported behavior among recreational anglers who were at risk of spreading aquatic invasive species. These findings suggest that eudaimonic values are an antecedent to values-behavior relationships and can improve the predictive capacity of models being developed to inform management strategies for minimizing human activities that are contributing to the unintentional spread of aquatic invasive species.
KW - Eudaimonia
KW - Fisheries management
KW - Pro-environmental behavior
KW - Recreation
KW - Values
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U2 - 10.1016/j.jenvp.2022.101778
DO - 10.1016/j.jenvp.2022.101778
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85125186492
SN - 0272-4944
VL - 80
JO - Journal of Environmental Psychology
JF - Journal of Environmental Psychology
M1 - 101778
ER -