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A Values-based Approach to Campaigns and Communications

This guide explores the importance of values and goals in campaigns and communications. It provides an overview of different types of values and goals, and how they can shape attitudes, behaviors, and environmental outcomes. The guide also discusses the activation of values and their impact on attitudes and behaviors.

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A Values-based Approach to Campaigns and Communications

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  1. A Values-based Approach to Campaigns and Communications Tim Kasser Tom Crompton

  2. Values & Goals • Guiding principles in life • Affect people’s attitudes towards particular objects and policies • Orient people to engage in particular behaviors • Many different types of values and goals exist

  3. Values & Goals • Organized in systems • Validated in many nations around world • Some values are compatible, others in conflict • Data can be represented with circumplex models • Compatible values are next to each other • Conflicting values are on opposite sides

  4. Self-Transcendence Self-Direction Universalism Openness to Change Stimulation Benevolence Hedonism Tradition Conformity Achievement Conservation Self-Enhancement Security Power

  5. ValuesSchwartz (1992) • Self-enhancing values • Social power, wealth, authority, successful, influential

  6. Self-Transcendence Self-Direction Universalism Openness to Change Stimulation Benevolence Hedonism Tradition Conformity Achievement Conservation Self-Enhancement Security Power

  7. ValuesSchwartz (1992) • Self-enhancing values • Social power, wealth, authority, successful, influential • Self-transcendent values • Helpful, responsible, mature love, social justice, equality, a world of beauty, protecting the environment

  8. GoalsGrouzet et al. (2005); Kasser & Ryan (1996) • Extrinsic • “I will have enough money to buy everything I want.” • “I will achieve the ‘look’ I've been after.” • “I will be admired by many people.”

  9. GoalsGrouzet et al. (2005); Kasser & Ryan (1996) • Extrinsic • “I will have enough money to buy everything I want.” • “I will achieve the ‘look’ I've been after.” • “I will be admired by many people.” • Intrinsic • “I will express my love for special people.” • “I will help the world become a better place.” • “I will assist people who need it, asking nothing in return.”

  10. Two Applications • Dispositions • General priority placed on values in system • Stable over time • Personal value dispositions are differentially correlated with ecological attitudes and behaviors

  11. Eco-Attitudes Attitudes towards the environment Good (2007); Saunders & Munro (2000) Concern about effects of environmental damage on other people, animals, and future generations Schultz et al. (2005)

  12. Eco-Behaviors Amount of forest harvested in social dilemma games Sheldon & McGregor (2000) Frequency of riding bikes, recycling, re-use, etc. Gatersleben et al. (in prep.); Kasser (2005); Richins & Dawson (1992) Size of Ecological Footprint 400 N Americans – transportation, housing, food Brown & Kasser (2005)

  13. Ecological Outcomes & Materialism Hurst, Dittmar, Bond, & Kasser (2013) Note: Correlations not corrected for reliability; Materialism includes Extrinsic vs. Intrinsic + other measures

  14. Two Applications • Dispositions • Activation of values: • Bleed-over effect – activation supports and encourages attitudes and behaviors consistent with those values • See-saw effect – activation suppresses and discourages attitudes and behaviors in conflict with those values

  15. Self-Transcendence Self-Direction Universalism Openness to Change Stimulation Benevolence Hedonism Tradition Conformity Achievement Conservation Self-Enhancement Security Power

  16. Activation of Eco-Behavior Vansteenkiste et al. (2004) • Belgian education students • Asked to read a text on recycling framed as: • Helping the community (intrinsic) • Saving money (extrinsic) • Compared to those given Extrinsic frames, those given Intrinsic frames: • Learned material more deeply • Were more likely to visit library to learn more • Were more likely to go on later trip to recycling plant

  17. Activation of Eco-Behavior Maio et al. (2011) • Students completed survey about extent to which car sharing • Saves money • Protects the environment • Then designed logo & disposed of draft drawings

  18. Recycling Experimental Condition

  19. Influencing E/SE PeopleChilton et al. (2011) • Screened > 700 UK adults and chose 30 people scoring in top 10% on SE Values • Came to lab and wrote about reasons why 3 values were important • E/SE values: Popularity, image, wealth • I/ST values: Acceptance, affiliation, broadminded

  20. Influencing E/SE PeopleChilton et al. (2011) • Underwent standardized interview on four topics • Climate change & Loss of UK countryside • Child mortality in developing nations & Poverty among UK children • Linguist naïve to primes coded interviews

  21. Someone vs. No one should Act

  22. Use of language – E/SE Primed • P 007 – “Mm, what would motivate me? I suppose money if there was a financial incentive to be more proactive…I do tend to switch things off but that’s more a case of me saving money in electricity than thinking oh that’s gonna help the world.”

  23. Use of language – I/ST Primed • P 026 – “I do think that the earth and the environment is precious and valuable...I think it should be at the top of the political agenda…I think that the world that we pass on to the next generation, you know, is, is, is our responsibility.”

  24. Sustainability Climate Change Recycling Car Share

  25. Sustainability Climate Change Diet Car Share

  26. Sustainability Climate Change Car Share Diet

  27. Sustainability Climate Change Helping People in Developing Nations Diet

  28. Summary • Rather than focus on rewards, punishments, and E/ST goals • Focus on encouraging and activating Intrinsic/Self-transcendent Values

  29. Thanks!

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