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Footpaths: studying a small-group intervention. Jill Fisher Institute of Energy and Sustainable Development De Montfort University. Do participants in Footpaths adopt more sustainable lifestyles? Why?. Method. First round of groups 5 groups 27 people Second round 4 groups 30 people.
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Footpaths: studying a small-group intervention Jill Fisher Institute of Energy and Sustainable Development De Montfort University
Do participants in Footpaths adopt more sustainable lifestyles? • Why?
Method • First round of groups • 5 groups • 27 people • Second round • 4 groups • 30 people • Questionnaire • Carbon Footprint Pre-group During groups Observation • Questionnaire • Carbon Footprint • Home energy use • Transport energy use • Interview Post-group • Questionaire • Carbon Footprint • Home energy use • Transport energy use One year anniversary of group start
Does behaviour change? • Carbon footprint • Frequency of pro-environmental behaviours
Partial Carbon Footprint • Post group reduction • 10% - Neighbourhood • 10% - Quaker • 9% - Church • 4% - LGBT • 10% - Ad hoc • UK Average - 6.7 tonnes • 4.1 - Neighbourhood • 4.0 - Quaker • 4.2 - Church • 4.4 - LGBT • 3.9 - Ad hoc
Actions being taken as a result of participating in Footpaths 150 actions in total • Average of 6 per participant • 89% are changes in behaviour • 9% are changes to insulation • 2% other minor or major purchases • 5 most popular • Turning heating down • Reduce car travel • More local food/in season food • Monitoring of home energy use • Less meat and dairy
Future actions planned as a result of participating in Footpaths 84 actions in total • Average of 3.5 per participant • 54% are changes in behaviour • 24% are changes in insulation • 23% other minor or major purchases • 5 most popular • Grow more food • Install PV • Insulate house walls • Other insulation • Water Butts
Who are the participants • Demographics • Age • Gender • Income • Education • Car ownership • Measures of greeness • New Ecological Paradigm • DEFRA segments • Initial carbon footprints
What participants say During the course of the interviews participants expressed a prior concern with sustainable living: “I’d been interested in the whole kind of sustainable living thing for quite a long time.” “Right, well I’ve been in interested in environmental things for a long time. I’ve been a member of FoE since 1973.” “I’ve always been interested in things green, I’ve never been particularly focused on the carbon footprint reduction side of things so I thought that was interesting.”
What may have facilitated behaviour change • Changes in measures • Pre-group to post-group changes in • Understanding • Attention and awareness • Self-efficacy • Competence (perceived ease)
What participants say It helped them to look at what they were actually doing: “I mean the original carbon footprint quite amazed me because I didn’t think originally we were that far away from the average and yet I wouldn’t say that our lifestyle as I saw it was that consumerist” “Some of the exercises were definitely quite telling, you know, what I thought I did and what I actually did were not necessarily tallying” “Probably the sharp bringing up with a few things and it’s made me far more aware,… whereas I would have thought about surface level things, it has made me aware of underlying stuff”
What participants say It encouraged them to pay attention to the issue: “Again it just brings it to the forefront of your mind so you are thinking about it because I think that’s the problem” “I don’t feel it was a huge learning curve for me, the actual information, I think it just brought it more to the fore” “ For a long time it’s been in the background of my head and just talking about it brings it to the forefront maybe”
What participants say It helped them to make changes: “It was a chance to think about the different subjects really, to break down the whole issue into different subjects.” “I’ve got a more positive feeling about my own ability to do something about my carbon footprint.” “I think it pushed it up the priority agenda for me. I am quite busy so it would be something I’m thinking I really want to do that, I really want to do that, but actually not creating the space and time to do it whereas attending this has actually made me think you are calling it a priority so why aren’t you doing something about it” “It gave me thinking space and ideas about how to live a greener life”
Do participants in Footpaths adopt more sustainable lifestyles? • Do they make changes in their lives • Why? • Who are the participants • What changes in participants • What do participants identify as important to them in changing their behaviour
Thank you Any questions? J.fisher@dmu.ac.uk This research is supported by De Montfort University. I am grateful to the Footpaths Project and the group participants for their co-operation. I would also like to thank my supervisors Katherine N Irvine, Richard Bull and Andrew Reeves
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