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Recycling knowledge, attitudes and behavior for on-campus and off-campus students in organized living groups at Oregon State UniversityRainey, Rochelle C. 06 February 1997 (has links)
The purpose of this study was to examine Oregon State University students' self-reported
knowledge, attitudes, and behavior about recycling. Students living in on-campus
and off-campus organized living groups were mailed a four-page survey with
questions about their recycling activities, their attitudes about recycling, their opinions of
the effectiveness of the campus recycling program, and their demographic information.
The study population included all students living in OSU's residence halls, cooperatives,
and fraternity and sorority houses. Three hundred fifteen surveys were mailed, and 237
were returned, for an overall response rate of 75%.
The results showed that:
1) Based on the criteria used to distinguish between recyclers and non-recyclers, 95% of
the sample were recyclers, with women reporting recycling behavior at a higher level
than men.
2) There were no significant differences in attitudes about recycling between recyclers
and non-recyclers. Recyclers, however, are more likely than non-recyclers to make
purchases based on their concern for the environment.
3) Most OSU students who recycle spend less than 30 minutes per month recycling, and
it appears to be a well-established pattern in their lives. More than 50% of the
students recycle on a daily or a weekly basis. 4) OSU students recycle all materials except plastics at high rates, ranging from 76% for glass to 87% for paper. Plastics were recycled by 64% of the students who recycle. 5) Students recycle at residences and in classrooms and offices on the OSU campus, and
report the least recycling activity at the Memorial Union. OSU students mainly use
the curbside collection service for off-campus recycling. 6) OSU students receive information about recycling from a wide variety of sources, including school, home, and the media.
One recommendation based on this study is that Campus Recycling provide education about materials re-processing and about the importance of purchasing products with recycled content to close the three-sided recycling loop, as well as to introduce the concept of source reduction. Another recommendation is that organized housing groups name a recycling coordinator who will educate and motivate the residents of the housing group to recycle. Eighty-one percent of the respondents reported television as a source of information about recycling. Additional research is needed to identify the time slots and programs watched by students if this media will be used for future educational interventions about recycling. Finally, because this survey dealt only with recycling of non-hazardous materials, additional research is needed to gather information on disposal of hazardous materials like batteries, automobile fluids, and household paint and cleaners. / Graduation date: 1997
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Portland's Multifamily Recycling Program: a Study of Coproduction Policy Implementation and Citizen InvolvementMesser, William Barry 01 January 1994 (has links)
This study is on coproduction as a governing policy instrument. Coproduction can be understood as the joint production of services by local officials and individual citizens intended to raise the quality and or amount of service provision. The concept of coproduction as developed in this study suggests that urban services are not simply created by officials and delivered to a passive public. Rather that actions of citizens are an integral part of the service production process. The study purposes are two-fold: (1) to construct a model of coproduction which provides a basis by which citizen involvement in the provision of public services can be fully understood and appreciated; and (2) to examine the usefulness of this model by using it to frame and guide evaluative research on a specific program which targets coproductive participation of citizens. The research examined efforts to implement a program to encourage recycling by residents in multifamily complexes in the City of Portland by involving the direct participation of the managers of the complexes. The research conducted in this study addressed both the inputs and outcomes of citizen involvement in coproduction. Findings of this research are suggestive of the potential importance of both inclusion and volition to furthering citizen involvement in the coproductive process. The level of citizen involvement in producing the programmatic outcomes was by most measures demonstrated to be very important. The results of the investigation in demonstrating the importance of involvement in coproduced programs in generating broader levels of community awareness and involvement, however, were not as conclusive. The model of coproduction developed in this study provides a potentially useful conceptualization of the process and outcomes of coproduction. The empirical investigation provides an assessment of the nature and strength of the relationship between citizen involvement and the coproductive process in the case of Portland's multifamily recycling program. Both the economic and civic considerations of coproduction which were specified and measured in the research contribute to a number of observations about coproduction as a policy instrument leading to several policy recommendations for programs which are built on citizen involvement.
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