Contents:PART I INTRODUCTIONIntroduction to the Handbook on Pro-Environmental Behaviour Change 2Birgitta Gatersleben and Niamh MurtaghPART II STATE OF THE ART1 Why do some behaviour change interventions not work as well as expected? 16Wojke Abrahamse2 Intrinsic motivation to act pro-environmentally 28Linda Steg3 Evaluating the effectiveness of pro-environmental behaviour changeinterventions: a review of reviews 38Birgitta Gatersleben, George Murrell and Judith Geusen4 One thing leads to another? Pro-environmental behavioural spillover 63Nicholas Nash and Lorraine Whitmarsh5 Experiences in nature and children's pro-environmentalism 78Silvia Collado and Gary W. Evans6 Norm nudges in neighbourhoods: when do they work and why? 96Tabea Hoffmann, Ward Rauws, Gregg Sparkman and Jan Willem BolderdijkPART III EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE7 Measuring pro-environmental behaviour: a critical reflection 114Birgitta Gatersleben8 The car or the bike today? Using segmentation to understand andchange commuter decision making 125Stewart Barr9 Cut from the same cloth? Understanding behavioural consistency inenergy and clothes shopping 142Christopher R. Jones, Natalie McCreesh, Caroline Oates and Helen Storey10 Designing behavioural interventions for better e-waste management andthe circular economy 163Keshav Parajuly, Ruediger Kuehr and Colin Fitzpatrick11 Understanding what shapes pro-environmental behaviours in smallconstruction firms 185Alice M. Owen, Niamh Murtagh and Kate SimpsonPART IV THEORETICAL PERSPECTIVES12 Is research on pro-environmental behaviour change focused on what matters? 200Niamh Murtagh13 Basic psychological needs and autonomous motivation: a humanisticperspective on pro-environmental behaviour change 212Marlis Wullenkord14 Environmental identity as a motivator of pro-environmental behaviour 227Susan Clayton and Sandor Czellar15 Collective identity as a vehicle for individual and systemic change 240Gerhard Reese16 Promoting sustainable behaviours: the problem with materialistic valuesand potential avenues to progress 252Amy Isham, Helga Dittmar and Tim Jackson17 Pro-environmental behaviour is a moral issue 270Ellen van der WerffPART V ALTERNATIVE PERSPECTIVES18 Should environmental communication be more disruptive and shouldpsychologists study this more? 281Christian A. Klöckner19 Charging for change: the effectiveness of economic instruments tochange environmentally-relevant behaviours 289Wouter Poortinga and Stefan Drews20 Household air pollution and behaviour change: learning fromunexpected findings 308Brendon R. Barnes21 Citizen science as a pro-environmental behaviour and a catalyst forfurther behaviour change 321Kayleigh J. Wyles and Natalia Pirani Ghilardi-Lopes22 Contested climate policies and public participation: anequal-opportunities- and values-based approach (EVA) 336Goda Perlaviciute, Lorenzo Squintani and Lu LiuPART VI THE CONTEXTS OF BEHAVIOUR23 Applying the Behaviour Change Wheel to mitigate the biodiversity crisis 354Melissa R. Marselle and Sarah E.
Golding24 If you want to change behaviour, start with the environment 373P. Wesley Schultz and Samantha N. Mertens25 From consumers to citizens - grassroots initiatives for system transformation 388Sebastian Bamberg26 A cognitive approach to sustainable lifestyles 405John Thøgersen27 Life-course transitions: thinking sociologically about sustainable consumption 423Kate Burningham and Susan VennPART VII CONCLUSIONS28 Concluding thoughts: what is moving us forward and what is still to be done? 443Niamh Murtagh and Birgitta GaterslebenIndex.