{"@context":{"@language":"en","@vocab":"https://schema.org/","citeAs":"cr:citeAs","column":"cr:column","conformsTo":"dct:conformsTo","cr":"http://mlcommons.org/croissant/","rai":"http://mlcommons.org/croissant/RAI/","data":{"@id":"cr:data","@type":"@json"},"dataType":{"@id":"cr:dataType","@type":"@vocab"},"dct":"http://purl.org/dc/terms/","examples":{"@id":"cr:examples","@type":"@json"},"extract":"cr:extract","field":"cr:field","fileProperty":"cr:fileProperty","fileObject":"cr:fileObject","fileSet":"cr:fileSet","format":"cr:format","includes":"cr:includes","isLiveDataset":"cr:isLiveDataset","jsonPath":"cr:jsonPath","key":"cr:key","md5":"cr:md5","parentField":"cr:parentField","path":"cr:path","recordSet":"cr:recordSet","references":"cr:references","regex":"cr:regex","repeated":"cr:repeated","replace":"cr:replace","sc":"https://schema.org/","separator":"cr:separator","source":"cr:source","subField":"cr:subField","transform":"cr:transform","wd":"https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/"},"@type":"sc:Dataset","conformsTo":"http://mlcommons.org/croissant/1.0","name":"Replication Data for: Greenwashing and Public Demand for Government Regulation","url":"https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/HOT20S","creator":[{"@type":"Person","givenName":"Dennis","familyName":"Kolcava","affiliation":{"@type":"Organization","name":"ETH Zürich"},"name":"Kolcava, Dennis"}],"description":"These files replicate the analysis in Kolcava, D (forthcoming), Greenwashing and Public Demand for Government Regulation, Journal of Public Policy Environmental governance in many high-income democracies relies to some extent on self-regulation by the private sector. Yet, this policy mode is contested and proponents of top-down government regulation argue that voluntary corporate sustainability commitments remain shallow and rarely are more than greenwashing. I assess to what extent firms’ business conduct is subject to societal checks and balances, in particular, whether public support for regulation constitutes a control mechanism of corporate contributions to environmental goods. I rely on an original survey experiment (N=2112) conducted with a representative sample of the Swiss voting population. The analysis shows that accusing firms of greenwashing reduces both citizens’ perceived effectiveness of self-regulation and perceived synergy of corporate profits and environmental protection. However, this attitudinal shift only translates into modest updates in respondents’ policy preference formation. As a result, short-run shifts in public support for regulation are an unlikely societal control mechanism of business conduct.","keywords":["Social Sciences","Environmental Politics","Regulation","Survey Experiment"],"license":"http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0","datePublished":"2022-08-30","dateModified":"2022-08-30","includedInDataCatalog":{"@type":"DataCatalog","name":"Harvard Dataverse","url":"https://dataverse.harvard.edu"},"publisher":{"@type":"Organization","name":"Harvard Dataverse"},"version":"1.0","citeAs":"@data{DVN/HOT20S_2022,author = {Kolcava, Dennis},publisher = {Harvard Dataverse},title = {Replication Data for: Greenwashing and Public Demand for Government Regulation},year = {2022},url = {https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/HOT20S}}","distribution":[{"@type":"cr:FileObject","@id":"replication_files.7z","name":"replication_files.7z","encodingFormat":"application/x-7z-compressed","md5":"2bd0132741c4a00086ff2d09dc365d3a","contentSize":"237845","description":"","contentUrl":"https://dataverse.harvard.edu/api/access/datafile/6424737"}]}