Does emigration affect pro-environmental behaviour back home? A long - term, local-level perspective
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2021
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Abstract
This study provides novel evidence on the effects of emigration on pro‐environmental behaviour back home.Focusing on the seven successor states of former Yugoslavia, I explore the relationship between people’spresent‐day pro‐environmental action and the local‐level intensity of a major guestworker emigration wavethat occurred four decades earlier. I find that more intense local‐level emigration is associated with a lowerlikelihood of pro‐environmental action; the instrumental variable analysis supports the causal nature of thisrelationship. This finding supports the conjecture that emigration contributes to greater consumerism athome and therefore reduces pro‐environmental behaviour. At the same time, controlling for the intensityof local‐level emigration, a higher proportion of women in the local migrant population is associated witha greater likelihood of pro‐environmental action. As women are generally more likely to undertakepro‐environmental behaviour as well as transfer new norms and practices across borders, this findingsupports the hypothesis that migration contributes to a cross‐border transmission of pro‐environmentalnorms and practices.ARTJOMS IVLEVS© 2020 The Authors.
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5.4 Sociology, 5.9 Other social sciences, 1.3. Anonymously reviewed scientific article published in a journal with an international editorial board and is available in another indexed database, SDG 10 - Reduced Inequalities
Citation
Ivļevs, A 2021, 'Does emigration affect pro-environmental behaviour back home? A long - term, local-level perspective', Kyklos, vol. 74, no. 1, pp. 48–76. https://doi.org/10.1111/kykl.12257