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Öğe Personality and pro-environmental engagements: The role of the Dark Triad, the Light Triad, and value orientations(Pergamon-Elsevier Science Ltd, 2023) Kiral Ucar, Gozde; Malatyali, Meryem Kaynak; Planali, Gamze Ozdemir; Kanik, BetulThis study aims to investigate the associations between the Dark Triad personality (DTP), the Light Triad personality (LTP), and pro-environmental behavior (PEB), and the mediating roles of value orientations (biospheric, egoistic, and altruistic values) in these relationships. A total of 312 individuals aged between 18 and 56 (M = 27.45; SD = 9.32) participated in this study. Path analysis showed that DTP was associated with an increase in the egoistic and with a decrease in the altruistic and biospheric value orientations. Additionally, LTP was associated with increased altruistic and biospheric value orientations. Last, LTP and DTP predicted proenvironmental behavioral intentions and past PEB via biospheric value orientation. Implications are discussed.Öğe Social identities, climate change denial, and efficacy beliefs as predictors of pro-environmental engagements(Academic Press Ltd- Elsevier Science Ltd, 2023) Kiral Ucar, Gozde; Yalcin, Meral Gezici; Planali, Gamze Ozdemir; Reese, GerhardClimate change is a large-scale environmental crisis humanity faces. However, research shows that a considerable amount of people deny climate change. In this research, we suggest a social identity perspective on how climate change denial may exert its effects on pro-environmental engagements. To do so, we conducted a crosssectional survey (N = 361) in which we assessed different (social) identities, efficacy beliefs, climate change denial, and pro-environmental actions. Results suggest that while environmentalist and global identities significantly predicted climate change denial, country identity did not. Environmentalist and country identities predicted collective efficacy, however, only environmentalist identity predicted participatory efficacy. Private pro-environmental behaviour was positively predicted by environmentalist and country identities; participation in collective action was positively predicted by environmentalist identity and negatively predicted by country identity. In addition, identification with environmentalist and global identities was positively associated with collective action through climate change denial and also participatory efficacy belief. These findings suggest that our consideration of climate change and behavioural choices might be shaped by our social environment.