In this paper, we test the hypothesis that participation in cultural associations improves social capital, and more specifically generalized trust, which in turn fosters environmental concern. Using a dataset combining two large cross-national socioeconomic surveys and an instrumental variable mediation approach, we find that a measure of generalized trust fully mediates the relationship between people’s participation in cultural organizations and their environmental concerns. This result suggests that governments can increase citizens' environmental concern-a prerequisite for pro-environmental behaviors-by encouraging their participation in cultural associations.

Environmental concern: a culture of trust

Bassetti, Thomas;
2025

Abstract

In this paper, we test the hypothesis that participation in cultural associations improves social capital, and more specifically generalized trust, which in turn fosters environmental concern. Using a dataset combining two large cross-national socioeconomic surveys and an instrumental variable mediation approach, we find that a measure of generalized trust fully mediates the relationship between people’s participation in cultural organizations and their environmental concerns. This result suggests that governments can increase citizens' environmental concern-a prerequisite for pro-environmental behaviors-by encouraging their participation in cultural associations.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11577/3576513
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