Abstract
Understanding the variables that influence pro-environmental intentions is key to promoting pro-environmental actions. In this research, we analyze how the sense of responsibility toward climate change and implicit theories about climate change (ITCC) interact to condition individual pro-environmental intention. A total of 48 psychology students with a mean age of 19 years were randomly divided into two experimental groups and participated in a pretest–posttest experiment. The experimental manipulation consisted of reading a news extract regarding scientific research: one group was given information stating that climate change is still reversible, instilling incremental ITCC; the other group was given the opposite information, instilling static ITCC. The results of the one-way ANOVA (F = 4.206, p
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Cuadrado, E., Macias-Zambrano, L., Guzman, I., Carpio, A. J., & Tabernero, C. (2023). The role of implicit theories about climate change malleability in the prediction of pro-environmental behavioral intentions. Environment, Development and Sustainability, 25(10), 11241–11261. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10668-022-02525-x
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