THE VALUE GAP: DISCREPANCY BETWEEN NORMATIVE IDEALS AND INDIVIDUAL PRIORITIES IN ENVIRONMENTAL ETHICS

Authors

  • Yusupova Muhabbatkhon Abdullajon qizi 2nd Year Doctoral Student at the Family and Gender Research Institute, Teacher of the Department of Pedagogy and Psychology, TMC Institute

Keywords:

Value gap, normative ideals, individual priorities, environmental ethics, ethical discrepancy, sustainability, moral psychology, behavioral inconsistency, collective responsibility, personal motivation.

Abstract

Environmental ethics, as an academic and philosophical discipline, strives to articulate the values, principles, and responsibilities that should govern human interaction with the natural world. A key focus within this field is the formulation of normative ideals—standards or aspirations that direct how individuals and societies ought to treat their environment. Notably, these ideals commonly emphasize sustainability, stewardship, respect for non-human life, and the minimization of harm to natural systems. However, the translation of these widely acknowledged or even legally encoded values into personal motivations, decisions, and behaviors is complex and often incomplete. This incongruence between collective, normative environmental ideals and the everyday priorities guiding individual conduct is often described as the “value gap.”

Downloads

Published

2026-02-09

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

THE VALUE GAP: DISCREPANCY BETWEEN NORMATIVE IDEALS AND INDIVIDUAL PRIORITIES IN ENVIRONMENTAL ETHICS. (2026). Web of Teachers: Inderscience Research , 4(2), 39-42. https://webofjournals.com/index.php/1/article/view/5920