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Correlation of behaviour Change, Evaluation and Future Intentions for sustainable leisure behaviours including descriptive statistics.
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The COVID-19 pandemic profoundly changed the way we live and consume. One open question is whether the crisis provides an opportunity to increase alternatives to materialistic consumption. We characterize these alternatives as sustainable leisure behaviour.
Our study aimed to analyse: (i) Changes in behaviour frequency of consumption and sustainabl...
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Context 1
... future behaviour intentions cor- relations were weak for all the tested behaviours and failed to cross the 0.001 significance level. Table 2 depicts evaluation and future intention for sustainable leisure behaviour change. Spearman's correlation effects between behaviour change and evaluation were all positive and highly significant on the 0.001 significance level. ...Similar publications
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... Indeed, despite the nuanced argumentation provided by the participants, many of them expressed acting from 'a sense of moral alignment', living according to their values (on living according to one's values and its connection to eudaimonic wellbeing, see e.g. Hüppauff, Richter, and Hunecke 2022;Ryan, Huta, and Deci 2006). This core of value-identity thus seems to direct the negotiations and to precede questions such as efficacy in the thinking of the participants. ...
... Numerous studies underline the positive role meaning plays in different aspects of psychological functioning such as life satisfaction, resilience and positive affect (Schnell, 2021). However, only recently the role of meaning in sustainable lifestyles is taken into account explicitly (Hunecke & Richter, 2019;Hüppauff, Richter, & Hunecke, 2022;Venhoeven et al., 2020). In their meta-analysis, Zawadzki et al. (2020) found the relationship between wellbeing and PEB to be stronger for constructs that are closer related to meaning making processes such as conscious actions and indicators of eudaimonic wellbeing. ...
... Future studies should be conducted concerning the question how meaning construction for sustainable lifestyles can be fostered. From meaning research we know meaning sources change by crisis (Hüppauff et al., 2022;Park, 2010), yet little is known how to intentionally support meaning construction for sustainability (Venhoeven, Bolderdijk, & Steg, 2013). To investigate this question, longitudinal and experimental designs would be well suited. ...
To enable human living within planetary boundaries is among the biggest challenges of our time. In this context the question emerges how consuming less can go along with subjective wellbeing. Analysing meaning construction of sustainable behaviour might offer insights regarding this relationship. The current study aimed to investigate vertical coherence as a mechanism of meaning construction of behaviours that mitigate resource consumption which we call sufficiency behaviour. Therefore, we conducted a survey with N = 544 participants and preregistered our analyses. Path-analysis revealed intrinsic motivation for repairing, curtailment and sharing to be related to hedonic wellbeing and behaviour frequency mediated by ascribed behavioural meaning. Intrinsic motivation did partially regress on altruistic and biospheric values. We found no significant relationship between sufficiency behaviour and life satisfaction or presence of meaning in life. We conclude that behavioural meaning is important for the behaviour occurrence as well as behavioural wellbeing. Choosing alternatives to buying new products seems to be perceived as meaningful when it is intrinsically motivated. Biospheric and altruistic values might constitute sources for the intrinsic motivation to develop. Taken together, these results illustrate how less consumption might positively connect to wellbeing. Future research should explore ways of strengthening meaningfulness of behaviour.
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