Kaaronen Roope O
Environmental Policy Research Group, Department of Social Research, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland.
Front Psychol. 2017 Nov 10;8:1974. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2017.01974. eCollection 2017.
Human behavior is an underlying cause for many of the ecological crises faced in the 21st century, and there is no escaping from the fact that widespread behavior change is necessary for socio-ecological systems to take a sustainable turn. Whilst making people and communities behave sustainably is a fundamental objective for environmental policy, behavior change interventions and policies are often implemented from a very limited non-systemic perspective. Environmental policy-makers and psychologists alike often reduce cognition 'to the brain,' focusing only to a minor extent on how everyday environments systemically afford pro-environmental behavior. Symptomatic of this are the widely prevalent attitude-action, value-action or knowledge-action gaps, understood in this paper as the gulfs lying between sustainable thinking and behavior due to lack of affordances. I suggest that by adopting a theory of affordances as a guiding heuristic, environmental policy-makers are better equipped to promote policies that translate sustainable thinking into sustainable behavior, often self-reinforcingly, and have better conceptual tools to nudge our socio-ecological system toward a sustainable turn. Affordance theory, which studies the relations between abilities to perceive and act and environmental features, is shown to provide a systemic framework for analyzing environmental policies and the ecology of human behavior. This facilitates the location and activation of leverage points for systemic policy interventions, which can help socio-ecological systems to learn to adapt to more sustainable habits. Affordance theory is presented to be applicable and pertinent to technically all nested levels of socio-ecological systems from the studies of sustainable objects and households to sustainable urban environments, making it an immensely versatile conceptual policy tool. Finally, affordance theory is also discussed from a participatory perspective. Increasing the fit between local thinking and external behavior possibilities entails a deep understanding of tacit and explicit attitudes, values, knowledge as well as physical and social environments, best gained via inclusive and polycentric policy approaches.
人类行为是21世纪面临的许多生态危机的根本原因,而且不可回避的事实是,广泛的行为改变对于社会生态系统转向可持续发展是必要的。虽然促使人们和社区实现可持续行为是环境政策的一个基本目标,但行为改变干预措施和政策往往是从非常有限的非系统视角实施的。环境政策制定者和心理学家都常常将认知“简化为大脑”,只在很小程度上关注日常环境如何系统地促进亲环境行为。这种情况的表现是广泛存在的态度-行动、价值观-行动或知识-行动差距,在本文中被理解为由于缺乏可供性而导致的可持续思维与行为之间的鸿沟。我认为,通过采用可供性理论作为指导启发式方法,环境政策制定者能够更好地推动将可持续思维转化为可持续行为的政策,这种转化往往具有自我强化作用,并且拥有更好的概念工具来推动我们的社会生态系统转向可持续发展。可供性理论研究感知和行动能力与环境特征之间的关系,它为分析环境政策和人类行为生态学提供了一个系统框架。这有助于确定系统性政策干预的杠杆点并加以激活,从而帮助社会生态系统学会适应更可持续的习惯。可供性理论在技术上适用于社会生态系统从可持续物品和家庭研究到可持续城市环境等所有嵌套层次,使其成为一个极其通用的概念性政策工具。最后,还从参与性角度对可供性理论进行了讨论。提高地方思维与外部行为可能性之间的契合度需要深入理解隐性和显性态度、价值观、知识以及物理和社会环境,最好通过包容性和多中心政策方法来实现。