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Dear Colleagues,



The sixth conference of the European Survey Research Association will take
place July 13-15 in Reykjavik, Iceland, in 2015.

We are organizing a session on "Using Surveys to Study the Environment:
Attitudes, Behaviours, Health", and invite relevant paper proposals (the
deadline is January 15, 2015). Please see the conference website (
www.europeansurveyresearch.org/conference) for more details, and feel free
to forward this e-mail to any potentially interested parties.



The session abstract is below.

Best wishes,



Kerry Ard

Ohio State University



Malcolm Fairbrother

University of Bristol





Effective public policies and regulations have worked to mitigate many
environmental problems globally. But other such problems remain severe
(e.g., urban air pollution) or are getting worse (greenhouse gas emissions,
species extinctions). There is an urgent need for research on solutions to
such problems, and in this regard survey research has much to offer.
Existing research has used health surveys to show that exposure to
environmental toxins is an important determinant of human health outcomes.
Political researchers have shown how public opinion has often shaped key
environmental policy outcomes.  Building on previous studies of these
kinds, this session welcomes papers related to survey research on
environmental topics broadly defined. Papers may be either substantive or
methodological. Substantively, papers should address topics including but
not limited to: the measurement of environmentally consequential behaviours
and lifestyles; public concern about environmental problems; political
attitudes relevant to environmental protection; or the impacts of pollution
on human health and well-being (including stress and mental health). What
are the correlates of less environmentally damaging behaviours, greater
environmental concern, more pro-environmental attitudes, or greater
exposure to environmental toxins? Papers may use datasets that are
comparative or single-nation, cross-sectional or longitudinal, but should
all make an important contribution to some substantive field of research
relevant to the natural environment. For example, how does exposure to
environmental toxins vary across different demographic groups, and how is
such exposure changing over time? Under what conditions do people support
(or oppose) measures for environmental protection? (What kinds of people,
and what kinds of protections?) Methodologically, we are interested in
innovations such as survey experiments, new or improved measures, new
analytical techniques appropriate for data types of particular relevance to
the environment, and innovative survey modes and forms of data linkage.




Kerry Ard, PhD
Assistant Professor of Environmental Sociology
College of Food, Agricultural and Environmental Sciences
School of Environment and Natural Resources
420A Kottman Hall, 2021 Coffey Road, Columbus, OH 43210
Phone: 614-292-4593.  Fax: 614.292.7432

http://senr.osu.edu/our-people/kerry-ard