Informing Public Engagement Strategies to Motivate the Public to Protect the Great Lakes: Lessons learned from the 2018 Great Lakes Basin Binational Poll.

Autor: Guo T; Cooperative Institute for Great Lakes Research at NOAA, Great Lakes Environmental Research Laboratory, University of Michigan, 4840 South State Road, Ann Arbor, MI, 48108, USA. tianguo@umich.edu., Graydon RC; Ohio Sea Grant Fellow at Great Lakes Regional Office, International Joint Commission, 100 Ouellette Avenue, Unit 800, Windsor, ON, N9A 6T3, Canada., Bejankiwar RS; Great Lakes Regional Office, International Joint Commission, 100 Ouellette Avenue, Unit 800, Windsor, ON, N9A 6T3, Canada.
Jazyk: angličtina
Zdroj: Environmental management [Environ Manage] 2020 Nov; Vol. 66 (5), pp. 733-741. Date of Electronic Publication: 2020 Sep 22.
DOI: 10.1007/s00267-020-01364-8
Abstrakt: Engaging the public in protecting water resources is a critical yet challenging task. A wealth of social science studies has identified psychological predictors for individual pro-environmental behaviors. These predictors can guide communication in public engagement and inform the allocation of engagement efforts. However, a thorny challenge is to select influential factors among many candidates. This paper addresses this challenge by using social science research to guide the development of strategies to motivate the public to protect the North American Great Lakes. We considered a variable selection technique, the LASSO regression, in the post-hoc analysis of the International Joint Commission's 2018 Binational Great Lakes Binational Poll data. The poll surveyed 4250 Canadian and U.S. residents of the Great Lakes basin. We fit LASSO logistic models to predict respondents' intentions to take three public actions to protect the Great Lakes, including contacting public officials, attending public meetings, and engaging in online forums and groups. The models included 41 predictors encompassing demographic characteristics as well as respondents' awareness, beliefs, and values that are pertinent to Great Lakes policy development and management. Results revealed eight variables that consistently predicted the three public actions, including indigenous status, political ideology, impacts of the specific policy issues of nuclear wastes, policy awareness and interests, and the Great Lakes values for personal benefits and wildlife. Based on these findings, we recommend strategies to motivate the public to take public actions to protect the Great Lakes.
Databáze: MEDLINE