Differentiating environmental concern in the context of psychological adaption to climate change

•Identifies factors linked to psychological adaptation to climate change threats.•Differentiates psychological impacts of egoistic, altruistic and biospheric concerns.•Biospheric environmental concern dominant in affecting psychological adaptation.•Ecological coping may decrease depressive symptoms...

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Veröffentlicht in:Global environmental change 2018-01, Vol.48, p.158-167
Hauptverfasser: Helm, Sabrina V., Pollitt, Amanda, Barnett, Melissa A., Curran, Melissa A., Craig, Zelieann R.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Identifies factors linked to psychological adaptation to climate change threats.•Differentiates psychological impacts of egoistic, altruistic and biospheric concerns.•Biospheric environmental concern dominant in affecting psychological adaptation.•Ecological coping may decrease depressive symptoms and increase pro-environmental behaviors.•Public-policy messaging to be (re)directed at people with egoistic concern. Despite existing evidence for the threats of climate change facing people living in the U.S., the psychological impacts of this threat have been neglected in public and scientific discourse, resulting in a notable lack in studies on individuals’ adaptation to climate change. Using social-cognitive theory, we examine how three forms of environmental concern—egoistic (e.g., concern for oneself; one’s health or life), social-altruistic (e.g., concern for others; future generations or country), and biospheric (e.g., concern for plants and animals; nature)—influence concurrent ecological stress and ecological coping strategies. Further, we examine how ecological stress and coping are associated with both depressive symptoms and pro-environmental behaviors. In an online survey of 342 U.S. adults we found unique patterns of the three forms of environmental concern. Only individuals higher in biospheric environmental concern perceived ecological stress and engaged in ecological coping. In contrast, individuals higher in social-altruistic concern did not perceive ecological stress, but did engage in ecological coping. Those higher in egoistic concern neither perceived ecological stress, nor engaged in coping. In addition, perceived ecological stress was positively associated with depressive symptoms; ecological coping negatively predicted depressive symptoms, while positively predicting pro-environmental behaviors. In sum, with the exception of those high in biospheric concern, study participants did not seem to perceive climate change threats as having a profound effect on their own or their family’s life. Differentiating three forms of environmental concern provides a nuanced view on their association with ecological stress and coping, and in turn depressive symptoms and pro-environmental behaviors. Results indicate that current public policy approaches that often focus on the natural environment when depicting or explaining the effects of climate change, may limit the effectiveness of interventions to those people who already show high concern for all
ISSN:0959-3780
1872-9495
DOI:10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2017.11.012