The Architecture of Intention: A Moderated Mediation Model of Green Self-Identity and Social Influence in Sustainable Consumption
Discuss this preprint
Start a discussion What are Sciety discussions?Listed in
This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.Abstract
In an era of ecological urgency defined by hazardous air quality enveloping Pakistan, a critical gap persists between green awareness and the will to act. This study illuminates the inner architecture of pro-environmental commitment by proposing and empirically testing a moderated mediation model. Drawing on data from 1,092 consumers in key polluting industrial sectors, our analysis moves beyond simple antecedents to reveal how consciousness is converted into intention. Using PLS-SEM, the findings demonstrate that for the triggers of Consumer Sustainability Consciousness having dimensions Sense of Retribution, Access to Information, and Labelling & Peer Pressure to be effective, they must be channeled through the powerful mediating mechanism of Green Self-Identity. It is only when sustainability is integrated into a consumer's self-concept that it becomes a true engine for driving Green Consumption Intention. This entire identity-driven pathway is then significantly amplified by the catalytic force of Social Influence. This research contributes a robust, mechanism-based explanation for the green intention gap, providing actionable insights for closing it by strategically cultivating consumer identity and harnessing the power of social norms.