Towards sustainable cities: The spillover effects of waste‐sorting policies on sustainable consumption

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Abstract

The increasing amount of waste in cities poses a great challenge for sustainable develop-ment. Promoting waste sorting is one of the priorities for various levels of public authorities in the context of the rapid growth of waste generation all around China. To achieve this goal, waste‐sorting policies should be precisely designed to ensure successful waste reduction at all stages. Previous studies have neglected the spillover effects of different regulatory policies, which may affect the overall goal of reducing waste by influencing different waste production stages. This paper fills this gap by comparing the spillover effects of two typical waste‐sorting policies on sustainable consumption behaviours through a survey conducted in Shanghai and Beijing (control group). By combining quasi‐natural experiment and questionnaire methods, this paper analyses data through a mediation test to explore the spillover effects between different regulatory policy groups and the effects of the mediation psychological factors. Results show that a penalty policy significantly decreases people’s sustainable consumption behaviours through a negative spillover effect, while a voluntary participation policy significantly increases sustainable consumption behaviours through a positive spillo-ver effect. Results can provide implications for policymaking in waste management and other pro-environmental fields to help cities become more sustainable by shifting multiple behaviours.

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APA

Yang, S., Cheng, P., Wang, S., & Li, J. (2021). Towards sustainable cities: The spillover effects of waste‐sorting policies on sustainable consumption. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 18(20). https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph182010975

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