Pro-Environmental Behavior Triggers Moral Inference, Not Licensing by Observers
Publication date
2023Published in
Environment and BehaviorVolume / Issue
55 (1-2)ISBN / ISSN
ISSN: 0013-9165ISBN / ISSN
eISSN: 1552-390XMetadata
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This publication has a published version with DOI 10.1177/00139165231163547
Abstract
Several studies have shown that moral licensing by observers makes observers more lenient in their judgment of subsequent immoral behaviors committed by a person. Environmental behavior is generally perceived as moral behavior, but it is not known whether it can trigger moral licensing by observers. In two pre-registered experimental laboratory studies (N-1 = 198, N-2 = 501), we have tested whether prior engagement in pro-environmental behavior triggers licensing by observers and thus makes observers judge more positively actors' subsequent immoral behavior (Study 1) and their subsequent anti- and pro-environmental behaviors (Study 2). We found that people engaging in pro-environmental behavior were subsequently rated as more pro-environmental and moral, and their subsequent pro- and anti-environmental behaviors (but not outright immoral behavior) were rated as more moral by observers. As these effects also concern subsequent pro-environmental behaviors, they are broader than what licensing theory suggests.
Keywords
licensing by observers, pro-environmental behavior, environmental attitude, immoral behavior, moral inference, character judgment,
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https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14178/2473License
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