| Literature DB >> 35187512 |
Kim Borovik1, Pamela Pensini1.
Abstract
Anthropomorphism of nature is known to be related to pro-environmental outcomes; however, little is known about these variables in the context of the coronavirus pandemic. The economic impact of the prolonged lockdowns may disrupt the historical relationship between these variables, as financial insecurity may compete with environmental concerns for consideration. This study examined the relationship between anthropomorphism of nature the context of COVID-19, and pro-environmental support, and the potential moderating role of financial insecurity in this relationship. It was hypothesised that anthropomorphism of nature in the context of COVID-19 would have a lesser effect on pro-environmental support for individuals who experienced financial insecurity during the pandemic. Participants (N=615; M age=48.71, SD age=17.50; 70% female) completed self-report measures of anthropomorphism of nature, anthropomorphism of nature in the context of COVID-19, financial insecurity, and a measure of support for pro-environmental policies in the economic recovery from COVID-19. Results demonstrated that, after controlling for general anthropomorphism of nature, anthropomorphism of nature in the context of COVID-19 predicted pro-environmental support (R 2 = .05, F(4, 610) = 8.36, p < .001). However, contrary to expectation, pro-environmental support was higher in those experiencing financial insecurity compared to those who were financially secure (B = -2.65, BootSE= .93, p = .004, 95% BootCI [-4.47, -.83]). Financial insecurity also did not moderate the relationship between anthropomorphism of nature in the COVID-19 context and pro-environmental support. Furthermore, the general tendency to anthropomorphise nature was not a significant predictor of support for pro-environmental policies. These findings have important implications for understandings of anthropomorphism, financial insecurity, and environmental protection as well as for public policy on economic recovery in response to the coronavirus pandemic.Entities:
Keywords: Anthropomorphism; Anthropomorphism of nature; Coronavirus; Covid-19; Environmental policy; Financial insecurity
Year: 2022 PMID: 35187512 PMCID: PMC8841273 DOI: 10.1016/j.cresp.2022.100039
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Res Ecol Soc Psychol ISSN: 2666-6227
Descriptive Statistics for Continuous Study Variables.
| M (SD) | Minimum | Maximum | Possible Range | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Anthropomorphism of nature | 21.07 (14.45) | 0 | 50 | 0 - 50 |
| Anthropomorphism of nature in the COVID-19 context | 21.06 (9.68) | 7 | 49 | 7 - 49 |
| Pro-environmental policy support | 56.26 (11.36) | 14 | 70 | 10 - 70 |
Note. N=615.
Descriptive Statistics for Financial Insecurity.
| Percent | Frequency | |
|---|---|---|
| Financial insecurity | 38.2 | 235 |
| No financial insecurity | 61.8 | 380 |
| Demographic Characteristic | Percent | |
|---|---|---|
| Education | ||
| Less than Year 12 | 6.2 | 38 |
| Year 12 | 11.2 | 69 |
| Vocational or trade | 15.1 | 93 |
| Bachelor's degree | 36.8 | 226 |
| Master's degree | 29.5 | 181 |
| PhD or higher | 1.1 | 7 |
| Employment | ||
| Unemployed | 39.2 | 241 |
| Retired | 6.3 | 39 |
| Stay-at-home parent | 12.5 | 77 |
| Student | 10.7 | 66 |
| Permanent employee | 22.1 | 136 |
| Fixed-term contract employee | 2.6 | 16 |
| Casual employee | 6.5 | 40 |
| Employment continuity in 12 months | ||
| Extremely unlikely | 7.7 | 37 |
| Unlikely | 6.9 | 33 |
| Neutral/Unsure | 27.9 | 134 |
| Likely | 20.4 | 98 |
| Extremely likely | 37.2 | 179 |
| Hours of work in 12 months | ||
| Significantly less hours | 8.3 | 38 |
| Slightly less hours | 7.4 | 34 |
| The same hours | 67.2 | 307 |
| Slightly more hours | 10.5 | 48 |
| Many more hours | 6.6 | 30 |