Journal article
The interaction of economic rewards and moral convictions in predicting attitudes toward resource use
B Bastian, A Zhang, K Moffat
Plos One | PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE | Published : 2015
Abstract
When people are morally convicted regarding a specific issue, these convictions exert a powerful influence on their attitudes and behavior. In the current research we examined whether there are boundary conditions to the influence of this effect. Specifically, whether in the context of salient economic rewards, moral convictions may become weaker predictors of attitudes regarding resource use. Focusing on the issue of mining we gathered large-scale samples across three different continents (Australia, Chile, and China). We found that moral convictions against mining were related to a reduced acceptance of mining in each country, while perceived economic rewards from mining increased acceptan..
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Awarded by Australian Research Council
Funding Acknowledgements
This research was supported by an Australian Research Council grant awarded to Brock Bastian (FT130101177), the Australia-China Council, Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade Australia and the CSIRO.