Waste sorting/disposal habits in Swedish households : Relations with facilities, gender and knowledge of waste treatment [in Japanese]
(2013) In Journal of the Faculty of International Studies, Utsunomiya University 36. p.1-16- Abstract
- A survey on household waste sorting and disposal habits was conducted in Sweden to investigate behavioral patterns of recycling in a context in which wide measures are taken to promote and encourage pro-environmental behavior by making it easy and convenient. 207 residents of three cities in southern Sweden, Lund, Malmö and
Helsingborg, responded to an online questionnaire survey. Relations between waste sorting/disposing habits with facilities, gender and knowledge of waste treatment were analyzed with some emphasis on food waste sorting. Recycling rates were generally high and reasons for sorting indicated that food waste sorting was a norm-based behavior. However, there were also indications that convenience was a precondition.... (More) - A survey on household waste sorting and disposal habits was conducted in Sweden to investigate behavioral patterns of recycling in a context in which wide measures are taken to promote and encourage pro-environmental behavior by making it easy and convenient. 207 residents of three cities in southern Sweden, Lund, Malmö and
Helsingborg, responded to an online questionnaire survey. Relations between waste sorting/disposing habits with facilities, gender and knowledge of waste treatment were analyzed with some emphasis on food waste sorting. Recycling rates were generally high and reasons for sorting indicated that food waste sorting was a norm-based behavior. However, there were also indications that convenience was a precondition. Recycling rates were higher when dedicated containers for disposing (recycling) items were provided and the collection point was closer. There was a striking gender difference in food waste sorting. Single male households did not sort food waste at all while more than 90% of other groups did when provided the collection service. This was interpreted as differences in lifestyles rather than attitudes based on other data. Relations between recycling rates with house-ownership and knowledge of waste treatment fees were found and effects of reference groups were also suggested. The authors plan
to replicate the survey in Japan to compare the results and draw implications for designing policies, services and environments for promoting waste sorting/recycling. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/4219525
- author
- Takahashi, Wakana ; Ito, Shunsuke and Tojo, Naoko LU
- organization
- publishing date
- 2013
- type
- Contribution to journal
- publication status
- published
- subject
- keywords
- waste sorting, food waste, behaviour, convenience, life style, Sweden, gender, knowledge
- in
- Journal of the Faculty of International Studies, Utsunomiya University
- volume
- 36
- pages
- 1 - 16
- publisher
- Utsunomiya University
- ISSN
- 1342-0364
- language
- Japanese
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- b7c4a438-78e7-4417-8c83-28018a2fce47 (old id 4219525)
- alternative location
- http://www.academia.edu/6732396/Waste_sorting_disposal_habits_in_Swedish_households_Relations_with_facilities_gender_and_knowledge_of_waste_treatment_in_Japanese_
- date added to LUP
- 2016-04-01 13:02:26
- date last changed
- 2023-04-18 20:45:45
@article{b7c4a438-78e7-4417-8c83-28018a2fce47, abstract = {{A survey on household waste sorting and disposal habits was conducted in Sweden to investigate behavioral patterns of recycling in a context in which wide measures are taken to promote and encourage pro-environmental behavior by making it easy and convenient. 207 residents of three cities in southern Sweden, Lund, Malmö and<br/><br> Helsingborg, responded to an online questionnaire survey. Relations between waste sorting/disposing habits with facilities, gender and knowledge of waste treatment were analyzed with some emphasis on food waste sorting. Recycling rates were generally high and reasons for sorting indicated that food waste sorting was a norm-based behavior. However, there were also indications that convenience was a precondition. Recycling rates were higher when dedicated containers for disposing (recycling) items were provided and the collection point was closer. There was a striking gender difference in food waste sorting. Single male households did not sort food waste at all while more than 90% of other groups did when provided the collection service. This was interpreted as differences in lifestyles rather than attitudes based on other data. Relations between recycling rates with house-ownership and knowledge of waste treatment fees were found and effects of reference groups were also suggested. The authors plan<br/><br> to replicate the survey in Japan to compare the results and draw implications for designing policies, services and environments for promoting waste sorting/recycling.}}, author = {{Takahashi, Wakana and Ito, Shunsuke and Tojo, Naoko}}, issn = {{1342-0364}}, keywords = {{waste sorting; food waste; behaviour; convenience; life style; Sweden; gender; knowledge}}, language = {{jpn}}, pages = {{1--16}}, publisher = {{Utsunomiya University}}, series = {{Journal of the Faculty of International Studies, Utsunomiya University}}, title = {{Waste sorting/disposal habits in Swedish households : Relations with facilities, gender and knowledge of waste treatment [in Japanese]}}, url = {{http://www.academia.edu/6732396/Waste_sorting_disposal_habits_in_Swedish_households_Relations_with_facilities_gender_and_knowledge_of_waste_treatment_in_Japanese_}}, volume = {{36}}, year = {{2013}}, }