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This paper
considers the main features of four general psychological
approaches to the analysis of environmentally sustainable
behavior (rational-economic, social dilemmas, attitude-behavior
models, and applied behavioral analysis), and focuses on the
problems inherent in applying each approach to this issue.
It also details the utility of a holistic Social-Ecological
Framework that I believe is useful for analyzing environmentally
sustainable behavior. This approach draws on concepts from
ecological psychology such as Gibsons (1979) notion
of affor-dances, and shows how such a method can
account for and help us understand the limitations of traditional
psychological approaches to environmentally sustainable behavior,
and provides a general guiding framework for the formulation
of environmental policy decisions and intervention programs.
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