Gender differences in environmental behavior are well-documented, yet research has largely overlooked how behaviors can be influenced by social meanings attributed to physical space. Urban spaces are inherently imbued with gendered traits, a concept grounded in feminist geography theory and supported by recent findings on space-focused stereotyping processes. Building on this evidence, Study 1 (N = 130) revealed the influence of gendered urban space perceptions on social expectations regarding gender differences in environmental behavior. Study 2 (N = 170) replicated these findings using a Gender Face Recognition Task indirectly measuring the cognitive association between masculinity and urban environments. Study 3 (N = 204) experimentally manipulated the cognitive accessibility of (counter-)stereotypical beliefs about urban spaces. Despite a manipulation backfire effect, results highlighted gender role norms as a mechanism influencing the gendering of environmental behaviors in public settings. Across studies, stereotypical beliefs about urban spaces and gender roles help explain gender gaps in environmentalism. We discuss implications for socio-environmental psychology and for urban designs that acknowledge gender dynamics to promote inclusive, sustainable public spaces.
Faccenda, G., Spaccatini, F., Ruzzante, D., Sparascio, C., Sacchi, S. (2026). Behave well in someone else's place! Genderization of urban spaces influences environmental behavior in public settings. SOCIAL SCIENCES & HUMANITIES OPEN, 13(June 2026) [10.1016/j.ssaho.2026.103015].
Behave well in someone else's place! Genderization of urban spaces influences environmental behavior in public settings
Faccenda G.;Sparascio C.;Sacchi S.
2026
Abstract
Gender differences in environmental behavior are well-documented, yet research has largely overlooked how behaviors can be influenced by social meanings attributed to physical space. Urban spaces are inherently imbued with gendered traits, a concept grounded in feminist geography theory and supported by recent findings on space-focused stereotyping processes. Building on this evidence, Study 1 (N = 130) revealed the influence of gendered urban space perceptions on social expectations regarding gender differences in environmental behavior. Study 2 (N = 170) replicated these findings using a Gender Face Recognition Task indirectly measuring the cognitive association between masculinity and urban environments. Study 3 (N = 204) experimentally manipulated the cognitive accessibility of (counter-)stereotypical beliefs about urban spaces. Despite a manipulation backfire effect, results highlighted gender role norms as a mechanism influencing the gendering of environmental behaviors in public settings. Across studies, stereotypical beliefs about urban spaces and gender roles help explain gender gaps in environmentalism. We discuss implications for socio-environmental psychology and for urban designs that acknowledge gender dynamics to promote inclusive, sustainable public spaces.| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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