Assessing environmental stewardship motivation
Publication Type: |
Journal Article |
Year of Publication: |
2010 |
Authors: |
P Bramston, G. Pretty, C. Zammit |
Publication/Journal: |
Environment and Behavior |
Keywords: |
ecological knowledge, environmental concern, social belonging, stewardship motivation |
ISBN: |
0013-9165 1552-390X |
Abstract:
Environmental stewardship networks flourish across Australia. Although the environment benefits, this article looks to identify what volunteers draw from their stewardship. The authors adapted 16 questions that purportedly tap environmental stewardship motivation and administered them to a convenience sample of 318 university students and then to 88 people living in rural Australia, who were either active members of environmental groups or voiced concern about local environmental issues. The results suggest that the measure consisting of these questions demonstrates acceptable internal consistency. Factor analyses support three relatively independent aspects of environmental stewardship motivation: (a) developing a sense of belonging, (b) caretaking the environment, and (c) expanding personal learning. Scores on the scale were not strongly correlated with well-being, suggesting that the scale measures more than general feelings of positive affect. Discussion focuses on the benefits of being able to reliably assess environmental stewardship motivation and areas for further development of the scale.