Pro-environmental behaviour is undermined by disgust sensitivity: The case of excessive laundering
Journal article, 2024

The amount of laundry washed by European consumers has grown excessively for reasons that cannot be explained by demographics alone. Initiatives trying to curb this trend have repeatedly failed. Previous studies have largely overlooked the psychological dimensions of laundering behaviour. In three separate studies we investigate how disgust, shame, cleanliness norms and environmental identity, mediated through a set of preceding behaviours, affect washing frequency. Our results highlight how conflicting psychological goals between disgust sensitivity and pro-environmental identity can undermine willingness to change laundry behaviour. Policy recommendations are suggested, and future research challenges are discussed.

Author

Erik Klint

Chalmers, Technology Management and Economics, Environmental Systems Analysis

Gregory Peters

Chalmers, Technology Management and Economics, Environmental Systems Analysis

Lars-Olof Johansson

University of Gothenburg

PLoS ONE

1932-6203 (ISSN) 19326203 (eISSN)

Vol. 19 6 June e0302625

Technical and behavioural change for a more sustainable textile life cycle

Formas (2016-01089), 2017-01-01 -- 2020-12-31.

Driving Forces

Sustainable development

Subject Categories

Psychology

Economic Geography

Environmental Sciences

Climate Research

Areas of Advance

Energy

DOI

10.1371/journal.pone.0302625

PubMed

38870121

Related datasets

Domestic laundering behaviours in Sweden [dataset]

DOI: 10.5878/cnaf-v548

More information

Latest update

8/8/2024 1