Fr. 86.00

Why People Do What They Do - And How to Get Them to Change

English · Hardback

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Description

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Why do people behave in the way they do and how can we get them to change?
Drawing on a large body of empirical research, Lahlou shows that people's behaviour is predictable and shaped by 'installations' combining three sets of factors: what is technically possible (affordances of the environment), what people are able to do (embodied competences), and what monitors and controls behaviour (social regulation). These channel our behaviour and incline us to act one way or another in specific circumstances - in the way, for example, that when you travel by plane, the steps you take from the moment you check in to the moment you take your seat are fixed and predictable.
Lahlou shows how we can intervene at each of the three levels of installations to change human behaviour, and how we can combine them for greater effectiveness and direction, with a robust, step-by-step method. Because the method is so powerful, Lahlou also provides ethical guidelines and caveats about using these interventions to improve society, not just one's own business and interests.
This concise and authoritative book, packed with real-world examples, will be of interest to anyone concerned about how to tackle the difficult problems of today's world. At long last, a book that offers realistic, concrete steps for changing our ways.

List of contents

Introduction
 
Part 1: Why people do what they do
1. Applying behavioural change
2. Behaviour is more or less predictable, and the reason why
3. From behaviour to activity
4. The ethics of behaviour and the golden cage of society
5. What makes people behave as they do: Installations and their three layers
6. The physical layer: Affordances of objects at the place of action
7. The embodied layer: Competences of the subject
8. The social layer: Regulation by others and society
9. The combination of layers: Redundancy, resilience and evolution
 
Part 2: How to change behaviour
10. The behaviour change intervention process step by step
11. Fixing business models and socio-economic platforms
12. Choosing issues, moments, and stakeholders
13. Multilayered installation design
14. Tips for the changemaker
Conclusion

About the author










Saadi Lahlou is a professor in the Department of Psychological and Behavioural Science at the LSE and Director of the Paris Institute for Advanced Study. His most recent books include Installation Theory: The Societal Construction and Regulation of Behaviour.

Summary

Why do people behave in the way they do and how can we get them to change?
Drawing on a large body of empirical research, Lahlou shows that people's behaviour is predictable and shaped by 'installations' combining three sets of factors: what is technically possible (affordances of the environment), what people are able to do (embodied competences), and what monitors and controls behaviour (social regulation). These channel our behaviour and incline us to act one way or another in specific circumstances - in the way, for example, that when you travel by plane, the steps you take from the moment you check in to the moment you take your seat are fixed and predictable.
Lahlou shows how we can intervene at each of the three levels of installations to change human behaviour, and how we can combine them for greater effectiveness and direction, with a robust, step-by-step method. Because the method is so powerful, Lahlou also provides ethical guidelines and caveats about using these interventions to improve society, not just one's own business and interests.
This concise and authoritative book, packed with real-world examples, will be of interest to anyone concerned about how to tackle the difficult problems of today's world. At long last, a book that offers realistic, concrete steps for changing our ways.

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