{"dcterms:modified":"2022-08-30","dcterms:creator":"Harvard Dataverse","@type":"ore:ResourceMap","@id":"https://dataverse.harvard.edu/api/datasets/export?exporter=OAI_ORE&persistentId=doi:10.7910/DVN/HOT20S","ore:describes":{"citation:keyword":[{"citation:keywordValue":"Environmental Politics"},{"citation:keywordValue":"Regulation"},{"citation:keywordValue":"Survey Experiment"}],"citation:dsDescription":{"citation:dsDescriptionValue":"These files replicate the analysis in Kolcava, D (forthcoming), Greenwashing and Public Demand for Government Regulation, Journal of Public Policy\n\nEnvironmental governance in many high-income democracies relies to some extent\non self-regulation by the private sector. Yet, this policy mode is contested and proponents of top-down government regulation argue that voluntary corporate\nsustainability commitments remain shallow and rarely are more than greenwashing.\nI assess to what extent firms’ business conduct is subject to societal checks and\nbalances, in particular, whether public support for regulation constitutes a control\nmechanism of corporate contributions to environmental goods. I rely on an original\nsurvey experiment (N=2112) conducted with a representative sample of the Swiss\nvoting population. The analysis shows that accusing firms of greenwashing reduces\nboth citizens’ perceived effectiveness of self-regulation and perceived synergy of corporate profits and environmental protection. However, this attitudinal shift only\ntranslates into modest updates in respondents’ policy preference formation. As a result, short-run shifts in public support for regulation are an unlikely societal control\nmechanism of business conduct."},"author":{"citation:authorName":"Kolcava, Dennis","citation:authorAffiliation":"ETH Zürich","authorIdentifierScheme":"ORCID","authorIdentifier":"000-0002-5511-4094"},"citation:datasetContact":{"citation:datasetContactName":"Kolcava, Dennis","citation:datasetContactAffiliation":"ETH Zürich","citation:datasetContactEmail":"dennis.kolcava@ir.gess.ethz.ch"},"citation:depositor":"Kolcava, Dennis","dateOfDeposit":"2022-08-18","subject":"Social Sciences","title":"Replication Data for: Greenwashing and Public Demand for Government Regulation","@id":"doi:10.7910/DVN/HOT20S","@type":["ore:Aggregation","schema:Dataset"],"schema:version":"1.0","schema:name":"Replication Data for: Greenwashing and Public Demand for Government Regulation","schema:dateModified":"2022-08-30 12:57:17.747","schema:datePublished":"2022-08-30","schema:license":"http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0","dvcore:fileTermsOfAccess":{"dvcore:fileRequestAccess":true},"schema:includedInDataCatalog":"Harvard Dataverse","ore:aggregates":[{"schema:name":"replication_files.7z","dvcore:restricted":false,"schema:version":1,"dvcore:datasetVersionId":331334,"@id":"https://dataverse.harvard.edu/file.xhtml?fileId=6424737","schema:sameAs":"https://dataverse.harvard.edu/api/access/datafile/6424737","@type":"ore:AggregatedResource","schema:fileFormat":"application/x-7z-compressed","dvcore:filesize":237845,"dvcore:storageIdentifier":"s3://dvn-cloud:182c54c5f9a-e4af0e25318f","dvcore:rootDataFileId":-1,"dvcore:checksum":{"@type":"MD5","@value":"2bd0132741c4a00086ff2d09dc365d3a"}}],"schema:hasPart":["https://dataverse.harvard.edu/file.xhtml?fileId=6424737"]},"@context":{"author":"http://purl.org/dc/terms/creator","authorIdentifier":"http://purl.org/spar/datacite/AgentIdentifier","authorIdentifierScheme":"http://purl.org/spar/datacite/AgentIdentifierScheme","citation":"https://dataverse.org/schema/citation/","dateOfDeposit":"http://purl.org/dc/terms/dateSubmitted","dcterms":"http://purl.org/dc/terms/","dvcore":"https://dataverse.org/schema/core#","ore":"http://www.openarchives.org/ore/terms/","schema":"http://schema.org/","subject":"http://purl.org/dc/terms/subject","title":"http://purl.org/dc/terms/title"}}