4.6 Review

Why People Do What They Do: An Interdisciplinary Synthesis of Human Action Theories

Journal

ANNUAL REVIEW OF ENVIRONMENT AND RESOURCES
Volume 47, Issue -, Pages 725-751

Publisher

ANNUAL REVIEWS
DOI: 10.1146/annurev-environ-020422-125351

Keywords

collective action; cultural practice; decision-making; behavior change; systemic change; proenvironmental behavior

Funding

  1. Gund Postdoctoral Fellowship
  2. Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada [435-2017-1071]

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Understanding the reasons behind human behavior is crucial for promoting equitable and sustainable futures. Despite theories on human action being scattered across various social science disciplines, synthesizing these theories can reveal underlying assumptions that help in achieving a multifaceted understanding of human behavior.
Understanding why people do what they do is central to advancing equitable and sustainable futures. Yet, theories about human action are fragmented across many social science disciplines, each with its own jargon and implicit assumptions. This fragmentation has hindered theory integration and accessibility of theories relevant to a given challenge. We synthesized human action theories from across the humanities and social sciences. We developed eight underlying assumptions-metatheories-that reveal a fundamental organization of human action theories. We describe each metatheory and the challenges that it best elucidates (illustrated with climate change examples). No single metatheory addresses the full range of factors and problems; only one treats interactions between factors. Our synthesis will help researchers, policymakers, and practitioners gain a multifaceted understanding of human action.

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