Expectation of empowerment as a determinant of citizen participation in waste management planning

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Abstract

Abstract: The study investigated the determinants of citizen participation in the development of a waste management plan. It was hypothesized that people would decide whether or not to participate in the planning based on the expectation of empowerment to be gained by their participation, not on the general evaluation of citizen participation. Four hundred and twenty-four volunteers responded to a self-report mailed survey conducted in August 2001 in Nisshin City. Nisshin City was selected as a city where the municipal government was starting to develop a basic plan for waste reduction and recycling. Major findings from the survey were: (a) the direct social benefits (i.e., making a better plan by citizen participation) were the main determinant of the general evaluation of citizen participation; and (b) expectation of personal empowerment (i.e., sense of self-efficacy and solidarity) was the main determinant of behavioral intention to citizen participation. © 2009 Japanese Psychological Association.

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Maeda, H., & Hirose, Y. (2009). Expectation of empowerment as a determinant of citizen participation in waste management planning. Japanese Psychological Research, 51(1), 24–34. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-5884.2009.00385.x

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