Climate Change Is an Intangible News Topic: A Qualitative Analysis of Audience Perceptions
Solveig Kristine Bortne Høegh-Krohn,
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Håvard Haarstad,
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Brita Ytre-Arne
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et al.
Environmental Communication,
Journal Year:
2025,
Volume and Issue:
unknown, P. 1 - 14
Published: Feb. 2, 2025
Language: Английский
Eco-anxiety or simply eco-worry? Incremental validity study in a representative Spanish sample
Frontiers in Psychology,
Journal Year:
2025,
Volume and Issue:
16
Published: April 10, 2025
Scientific
literature
is
keen
to
promote
the
study
of
eco-anxiety
despite
its
current
low
prevalence
and
inconsistent
relationships
with
pro-environmental
behavior
mental
health.
In
this
paper,
we
analyze
in
a
representative
sample
Spanish
population
(N
=
1911)
incremental
validity
eco-worry
construct
concerning
that
at
three
levels
environmental
commitment:
high
(environmental
activists),
medium
(people
who
are
not
part
any
organization
but
would
like
to),
neither
belong
groups
nor
want
to).
Our
results
showed
(1)
activists
our
did
seem
be
eco-anxious
rather
eco-worried,
(2)
commitment,
positively
mediated
relationship
between
climate
change
perception
general
willingness
for
behavior,
eco-worry,
eco-anxiety,
connected
life
satisfaction
through
behave
pro-environmentally.
It
concluded
does
add
anything
more
intuitive
non-pathological
concept
except
alarm
signal,
which
all
strategic
when
goal
individual
behaviors
collective
social
actions.
Language: Английский
How Western Buddhist climate activists negotiate climate emotions
Frontiers in Psychology,
Journal Year:
2024,
Volume and Issue:
15
Published: Nov. 7, 2024
Understanding
the
underpinnings
of
pro-environmental
behavior
is
key
to
mitigating
socio-ecological
crisis.
Climate
emotions
have
a
critical
albeit
complex
role
in
modulating
behavior.
Moreover,
ideological
frames,
particularly
those
from
world
religions,
exert
strong
influence
on
behavior,
covering
most
humanity.
Among
these,
Buddhism
has
long
been
argued
contain
elements
suited
green
transition.
However,
empirical
research
and
ecology
scarce,
little
known
about
dynamics
between
climate
among
Buddhists.
In
this
article,
we
increase
knowledge
action
by
analyzing
findings
case
study
investigating
thirteen
Western
Buddhist
activists,
who
operate
at
intersection
environmentalism.
Life
history
thematic
interview
data
shows
that
interpretations
shape
attitudes
toward
profound
ways,
with
respondents
manifesting
high
levels
emotional
reflexivity.
Interpretations
compassion
interconnectedness
facilitate
various
care
for
non-human
nature.
Some
participants
reported
anxiety.
Teachings
impermanence
cultivation
equanimity
affect
engagement
grief,
anger,
despair,
hope.
karma
allow
negotiating
balance
individual
guilt
allocation
responsibility
social
structures,
although
emerges
as
somewhat
conflicted
participants.
Furthermore,
emotion
norms
avoiding
anger
conflict
can
prevent
collective
activation,
some
were
traditional
anger.
Withdrawal
into
practice
an
inner
focus
was
used
cope
uncertainty
burnout,
when
seen
address
psychological
roots
crisis
could
disengagement.
Our
contributes
interdisciplinary
emotions,
environmental
activism,
religion.
Language: Английский
The climate anxiety compass: A framework to map the solution space for coping with climate anxiety
Dialogues on climate change.,
Journal Year:
2024,
Volume and Issue:
unknown
Published: Nov. 18, 2024
Witnessing
the
rapidly
unfolding
consequences
of
climate
change,
many
people
feel
worried,
stressed
and
anxious.
While
suggestions
on
how
to
cope
with
anxiety
have
been
proposed,
literature
lacks
a
theory-informed
framework
that
structures
integrates
different
coping
strategies.
We
introduce
Climate
Anxiety
Compass:
classifies
strategies
individuals
can
use
along
three
dimensions:
(a)
problem-focused
(targeting
change
its
consequences)
or
emotion-focused
emotions
stress
caused
by
change),
(b)
mitigation
(reducing
avoiding
stressor)
adaptation
(preparing
for,
adjusting
to,
learning
live
stressor),
(c)
individually
oriented
collectively
oriented.
Together,
Compass
identifies
eight
distinct
types
The
help
who
experience
explore
options
structure
future
research
into
which
interventions
are
most
effective.
Language: Английский