From exposure to impact : effects of conservation volunteering on connection with nature and pro-environmental behavior : a case study from Iceland

Environmental volunteering in Iceland was taken as a case study to investigate whether taking part in an extended conservation volunteering project has the potential to increase participants’ connection with nature and motivate them to act in a more environmentally-friendly way. Drawing from theorie...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Horn, Olga
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: Lunds universitet/LUCSUS 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://lup.lub.lu.se/student-papers/record/4145519
Description
Summary:Environmental volunteering in Iceland was taken as a case study to investigate whether taking part in an extended conservation volunteering project has the potential to increase participants’ connection with nature and motivate them to act in a more environmentally-friendly way. Drawing from theories of behavior change and the human-nature relationship a mixed-methods approach was applied. Levels of Nature Relatedness (NR) and Pro-Environmental Behavior (PEB) were generated from 49 former and 21 prospective volunteers and compared using descriptive statistics. In addition, self-reported change data was examined and supplemented with qualitative accounts derived from interviews and the survey. While the comparative approach yielded mixed results, the qualitative findings suggest that the participation in an extended volunteering project is indeed able to influence nature connectedness through an increased familiarity and PEB through an increase in awareness and concern as well as reflection. Wider implications of the findings are discussed.