TY - JOUR
T1 - "you Have the River to Throw It Away"
T2 - Colombian Children's Reasoning about Transgressions to Nature in Contexts of Economic Performance and Communitarian Needs
AU - Pizza, Lizette
AU - Posada, Roberto
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© Copyright 2020, Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., publishers 2020.
PY - 2020/12
Y1 - 2020/12
N2 - This study explored the reasoning, expectations, and judgments concerning prototypical transgressions to nature and contextualized situations entailing conflict of interest between conservation of nature and economic performance or communitarian needs. The authors interviewed 71 children from three grade levels (mean ages first grade = 5.91, fifth grade = 10.17, ninth grade = 14.48 years) who belong to two schools in Bogotá, Colombia, that are located in a zone with polluted rivers and wetlands with high levels of environmental risk. Results showed that children construct moral reasoning regarding prototypical and contextualized environmental transgressions, and their judgments vary due to informational assumptions. Children are very concerned about environmental transgressions as they recognize their impact on human welfare and the intrinsic value of nature, especially when they believe that there is a correspondence between humans and nature. Whereas young children focus on welfare, older children are also able to consider justice and harmony in their moral evaluations. Surprisingly, children of all ages tend to expect people to damage the environment even when there is no conflict of interest, and this could be related to exposure to degraded environments.
AB - This study explored the reasoning, expectations, and judgments concerning prototypical transgressions to nature and contextualized situations entailing conflict of interest between conservation of nature and economic performance or communitarian needs. The authors interviewed 71 children from three grade levels (mean ages first grade = 5.91, fifth grade = 10.17, ninth grade = 14.48 years) who belong to two schools in Bogotá, Colombia, that are located in a zone with polluted rivers and wetlands with high levels of environmental risk. Results showed that children construct moral reasoning regarding prototypical and contextualized environmental transgressions, and their judgments vary due to informational assumptions. Children are very concerned about environmental transgressions as they recognize their impact on human welfare and the intrinsic value of nature, especially when they believe that there is a correspondence between humans and nature. Whereas young children focus on welfare, older children are also able to consider justice and harmony in their moral evaluations. Surprisingly, children of all ages tend to expect people to damage the environment even when there is no conflict of interest, and this could be related to exposure to degraded environments.
KW - Anthropocentric
KW - Biocentric
KW - Environmental reasoning
KW - Informational assumptions
KW - Moral development
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85097392617
U2 - 10.1089/eco.2019.0061
DO - 10.1089/eco.2019.0061
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85097392617
SN - 1942-9347
VL - 12
SP - 267
EP - 276
JO - Ecopsychology
JF - Ecopsychology
IS - 4
ER -