TY - JOUR
T1 - Failure to morally Self-regulate
T2 - Deindividuation and moral disengagement from pro-environmental behavioural intentions across tourism and home contexts
AU - Wu, Snow
AU - Font, Xavier
AU - Liu, Jingyan
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 The Author(s). Published by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
PY - 2024/5/23
Y1 - 2024/5/23
N2 - This study extends current research on cross-contextual inconsistencies in pro-environmental behaviour (PEB) intentions. We compare the mechanisms influencing PEB intentions in tourism and post-visit home contexts. We find that moral obligation, moral disengagement, and perceived anonymity are consistently linked with PEB intentions in both contexts, but public self-awareness has a substantial impact on PEB intentions only during travel. While public self-awareness does not work consistently in relation to PEB intentions across tourism and home contexts, perceived anonymity has a consistently strong impact on moral disengagement and PEB intentions in both contexts. This study extends previous research on the contextual inconsistency of PEB intentions by elucidating the mechanisms by which deindividuation (anonymity and absence of public self-awareness) may limit PEB intentions through failure of moral self-regulation. This research also contributes to the literature on moral disengagement and deindividuation by demonstrating how the predictive effects of deindividuation components depend on the environment. Our findings will help practitioners and policymakers to devise effective, context-aware strategies to promote sustainable behaviours.
AB - This study extends current research on cross-contextual inconsistencies in pro-environmental behaviour (PEB) intentions. We compare the mechanisms influencing PEB intentions in tourism and post-visit home contexts. We find that moral obligation, moral disengagement, and perceived anonymity are consistently linked with PEB intentions in both contexts, but public self-awareness has a substantial impact on PEB intentions only during travel. While public self-awareness does not work consistently in relation to PEB intentions across tourism and home contexts, perceived anonymity has a consistently strong impact on moral disengagement and PEB intentions in both contexts. This study extends previous research on the contextual inconsistency of PEB intentions by elucidating the mechanisms by which deindividuation (anonymity and absence of public self-awareness) may limit PEB intentions through failure of moral self-regulation. This research also contributes to the literature on moral disengagement and deindividuation by demonstrating how the predictive effects of deindividuation components depend on the environment. Our findings will help practitioners and policymakers to devise effective, context-aware strategies to promote sustainable behaviours.
KW - pro-environmental behaviour, deindividuation, perceived anonymity, public self-awareness, moral obligation,
KW - moral disengagement
KW - deindividuation
KW - perceived anonymity
KW - public self-awareness
KW - moral obligation
KW - Pro-environmental behaviour
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85193845594&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/13683500.2024.2355559
DO - 10.1080/13683500.2024.2355559
M3 - Article
JO - Current Issues in Tourism
JF - Current Issues in Tourism
SN - 1368-3500
ER -