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Coping with Climate Change among Adolescents: Implications for Subjective Well-Being and Environmental Engagement

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The objective of this questionnaire study was to investigate how Swedish adolescents (n = 321) cope with climate change and how different coping strategies are associated with environmental efficacy, pro-environmental behavior, and subjective well-being. The results were compared to an earlier study on 12-year-olds, and the same coping strategies, problem-focused coping, de-emphasizing the seriousness of the threat, and meaning-focused coping, were identified. As in the study on children, problem-focused and meaning-focused coping were positively related to felt efficacy and environmental behavior, while de-emphasizing the threat was negatively related to these measures. As expected, the more problem-focused coping the adolescents used, the more likely it was that they experienced negative affect in everyday life. This association was explained by the tendency for highly problem-focused adolescents to worry more about climate change. In contrast, meaning-focused coping was positively related to both well-being and optimism. When controlling for well-known predictors such as values and gender, meaning-focused and problem-focused coping were independent positive predictors of environmental efficacy and pro-environmental behavior, while de-emphasizing the threat was a negative predictor of pro-environmental behavior. The results are discussed in relation to coping theories and earlier studies on coping with climate change.
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Sustainability 2013, 5, 2191-2209; doi:10.3390/su5052191
sustainability
ISSN 2071-1050
www.mdpi.com/journal/sustainability
Article
Coping with Climate Change among Adolescents: Implications
for Subjective Well-Being and Environmental Engagement
Maria Ojala
Department of Education, Uppsala University, Box 2136, 750 02 Uppsala, Sweden;
E-Mail: maria.ojala@edu.uu.se; Tel.: +46-19-4712422
Received: 13 March 2013; in revised form: 26 April 2013 / Accepted: 12 May 2013 /
Published: 14 May 2013
Abstract: The objective of this questionnaire study was to investigate how Swedish
adolescents (n = 321) cope with climate change and how different coping strategies are
associated with environmental efficacy, pro-environmental behavior, and subjective
well-being. The results were compared to an earlier study on 12-year-olds, and the same
coping strategies, problem-focused coping, de-emphasizing the seriousness of the threat,
and meaning-focused coping, were identified. As in the study on children, problem-focused
and meaning-focused coping were positively related to felt efficacy and environmental
behavior, while de-emphasizing the threat was negatively related to these measures. As
expected, the more problem-focused coping the adolescents used, the more likely it was
that they experienced negative affect in everyday life. This association was explained by
the tendency for highly problem-focused adolescents to worry more about climate change.
In contrast, meaning-focused coping was positively related to both well-being and
optimism. When controlling for well-known predictors such as values and gender,
meaning-focused and problem-focused coping were independent positive predictors of
environmental efficacy and pro-environmental behavior, while de-emphasizing the threat
was a negative predictor of pro-environmental behavior. The results are discussed in
relation to coping theories and earlier studies on coping with climate change.
Keywords: global climate change; problem-focused coping; meaning-focused coping;
climate change skepticism; optimism; subjective well-being; negative affect;
pro-environmental behavior; environmental efficacy
OPEN ACCESS
Sustainability 2013, 5 2192
1. Introduction
Researchers have recently begun arguing that global climate change is not only an environmental
problem but also a socio-psychological problem, both in the sense that the western world‘s life-style to
a large extent contributes to climate change and that the complexity and seriousness of this problem
could turn it into a psychological stressor [13]. How people psychologically cope with climate change
could be related both to environmental engagement and well-being [2,47]. There are, however, few
empirical studies that have focused on this topic, and those that exist were mainly conducted with
adults [5,8]. Since young people are the future politicians, business leaders, and scientists, it is
important to find out how this group handles climate change at a psychological level. The aim of this
study was therefore to explore how a group of Swedish late adolescents cope with global climate
change and how these coping strategies relate to subjective well-being (positive affect, negative affect,
life satisfaction) and environmental engagement (environmental efficacy, pro-environmental behavior).
In the remainder of this introductory section, coping is first defined. Thereafter, some studies on
climate change and coping are introduced. Finally, the more specific aims of the study are presented.
1.1. The Concept of Coping
Coping is about humans trying to handle diverse kinds of psychological threats and stressors; it
concerns: ―cognitive and/or behavioral efforts to manage specific external and/or internal demands([9],
p. 141). Research in this area has often focused on stressors and negative emotions in a proximal
context, for example, interpersonal worry. However, according to Lazarus and Folkman [9], the
creators of one of the most well-known theories about coping, societal problems and related feelings
such as powerlessness can also be defined as stressors. In addition, coping is not only about dealing
with threats to one‘s own well-being, but also concerns perceived threats to the well-being of others. In
the case of climate change these ―others‖ could be future generations, animals, and people living in
different parts of the world [10,11]. It is important to learn how to constructively cope with other-oriented
worries; otherwise they could turn into self-focused worry and result in passivity instead of
pro-social/pro-environmental engagement [12,13].
In Lazarus and Folkman‘s [9] coping theory, two main ways of coping are distinguished:
problem-focused and emotion-focused coping. When using problem-focused coping, people confront
the problem/stressor; they search, for instance, for information about what they themselves can do to
solve the problem or they talk with others to get information about what one can do. Problem-focused
coping is seen as an adaptive way of dealing with stress, and studies have shown that these strategies
often are positively related to well-being [9,14]. However, it has also been found that when stressors
are more or less uncontrollable, for instance when the stressor is a societal threat, problem-focused
coping can sometimes create more distress and, thus, be associated with low well-being [1517].
When using emotion-focused coping, people are not primarily trying to do something about the
problem causing the stress; instead they use different strategies to soothe or get rid of the negative
emotions [9]. Strategies such as distancing oneself from the emotions, or avoiding or denying the
stressor are utilized. Just as in the case of problem-focused coping, the relations between
emotion-focused strategies and measures of well-being are mixed and context-dependent. When
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stressors are uncontrollable, these strategies can be necessary and beneficial [18], however, when used
too frequently in a micro context they can adversely affect well-being (for a review see [19]).
In recent years, the focus on how people regulate negative emotions has been complemented with a
third main way to cope: meaning-focused coping [20]. This includes strategies such as positive
re-appraisal (acknowledging the stressor but still being able to reverse one‘s perspective), finding
meaning and benefits in a difficult situation, revising goals, and turning to spiritual beliefs.
Meaning-focused coping has been found to be especially important when a stressor cannot be resolved
at once, or perhaps not at all, such as when one has to care for a terminally ill partner. This way of
coping is more closely related to the activation of positive emotions than the reduction of negative
emotions. It is not equivalent to denial because positive emotions can instead help the person to
confront a stressor and undertake problem-focused efforts, even when no immediate progress can be
seen [20]. Positive emotions can also buffer against adverse physiological and psychological
consequences of stress [21,22].
When it comes to coping among children and adolescents it has been found that they are less
inclined to use problem-focused coping than adults [23]. This could be explained by the fact that
young people do not have as much control over their actions as adults. They are for instance highly
dependent upon how their parents act. Thus, it could be argued that for young people problem-focused
coping could be more stressful, because even if they gain more information about what they can do
about the stressor at hand, they may not be free to act because of their parents.
1.2. Coping with the Climate Threat
While research on how young people cope with negative emotions in relation to climate change is
scarce, quite a few studies have explored young people‘s emotions concerning global problems such as
climate change. These studies show that many young people, from middle childhood to late
adolescence, experience negative emotions such as worry, sadness, anger, helplessness, and pessimism
concerning these problems and the global future [2433]. How young people cope with the emotions
evoked is important to explore, since coping strategies could be even more important than the
emotions themselves in influencing environmental engagement and well-being.
There is some research on adults about coping strategies in relation to the climate threat. Homburg
and colleagues [5] performed a study where problem-focused strategies were found to be positively
related to measures of both environmental stress and pro-environmental behavior. In addition, one
emotion-focused strategy, denial of guilt, was negatively correlated with the same two measures. In an
experimental study by van Zomeren and colleagues [8], people who used problem-focused coping in
relation to the climate threat were more inclined to have environmental action intentions. Thus, these
studies indicate that coping with the climate threat does have implications for well-being and
environmental engagement.
Other studies have shown that it is quite common for adults to use distancing strategies to deal with
the climate threat [34,35]. They, for instance, turn off the television when news about climate change
is broadcasted. Although not as common, de-emphasizing the seriousness of the climate problem is
also a strategy present in some groups. This could be a way to protect oneself against the anxiety
evoked by the threat that climate change poses to deep-seated world-views, for instance conservatism
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or a belief in a just world [36,37]. Studies have also found that children as young as eleven years of
age sometimes use these denial-like strategies to deal with climate change [11,17,38].
A qualitative study investigating how children, adolescents, and young adults cope with climate
change revealed that in addition to problem-focused and emotion-focused coping, meaning-focused
strategies were quite often used to activate hope in relation to climate change [11]. More specifically
young people‘s meaning-focused strategies included both positive reappraisal, i.e., acknowledging that
the climate threat is a big problem but also perceiving hopeful aspects such as increased knowledge
about this threat in society, and trust, i.e., being able to remind oneself in times of stress that one has
trust in different societal actors. Thus, these strategies were similar to meaning-focused coping
strategies as used in other coping domains (positive re-appraisal and spiritual beliefs/trust) and they
were used more to activate positive emotions than to get rid of negative emotions (see [20]).
In a study on a group of 12-year-olds, the coping strategies identified in the qualitative study
described above were transformed into quantitative measures. A principal component analysis was
performed and three reliable coping strategies were identified: problem-focused coping (cognitive),
de-emphasizing the seriousness of climate change (denial, egocentric thinking, not caring), and
meaning-focused coping (positive reappraisal, trust). Thereafter, the study explored the relationships
between these strategies used to cope with the climate threat, on the one hand, and environmental
engagement and subjective well-being, on the other hand [17]. One hypothesis was that because
climate change is a more or less uncontrollable stressor, something that an individual hardly can cope
with alone, problem-focused coping could be associated with low well-being. This might be even more
true for children who are dependent on their parents and cannot do whatever they want when it comes
to living in an environmentally friendly fashion. Since meaning-focused coping has been found to be
beneficial in connection with stressors in a proximal context that cannot be solved immediately,
another hypothesis was that this strategy would also be constructive when coping with climate change,
i.e., that it would be positively related to both well-being and environmental engagement. For instance,
having trust in other actors when it comes to improving the climate problem seems necessary for well-
being but also for environmental engagement, because it is hard to feel that one‘s own actions are
effective if one does not have faith that other more powerful actors will do their part.
The more specific results of the study were that de-emphasizing the threat, a kind of emotion-focused
coping, had negative relations to both felt environmental efficacy and pro-environmental behavior,
while problem-focused and meaning-focused coping had positive associations with the same
measures [17]. However, problem-focused coping also had a positive relation to general negative
affect, i.e., to depressive and anxious feelings in everyday life. This association was explained by the
fact that highly problem-focused children worried a lot about climate change. No relations were
identified between problem-focused coping and the other facets of subjective well-being: life
satisfaction and general positive affect. In contrast, the more meaning-focused coping the children
employed, the more likely it was that they felt a high degree of general positive affect and
life-satisfaction, and the less likely it was that they felt general negative affect. Furthermore,
meaning-focused coping, optimism concerning climate change, and a high degree of purpose in life
served as buffers against general negative affect for children who scored high on problem-focused
coping. In sum, the results of this study indicate that cognitive problem-focused coping is associated in
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this age-group with general negative affect. The study also shows the benefits related to the use of
meaning-focused coping and this coping strategy‘s close association with positive emotions.
1.3. Aims of the Study
In the study on 12-year-olds described above, the need to conduct similar studies on other
age-groups of young people was pointed out [17]. For instance, adolescents are more cognitively
mature than children and also have gained some freedom from their parents despite still living at home.
Therefore, perhaps the relation between problem-focused coping and well-being is different in this
group. On the other hand, adolescents are probably better able to grasp the complexity of the climate
problem, and therefore even constructive coping strategies may not be able to counteract the negative
emotions that are evoked by this increased knowledge (see also [11]). Thus, the goal of the present
study was to investigate the following questions: (1) whether the same three coping strategies that were
found among the children can be identified in a group of late adolescents; (2) if so, whether these
strategies relate in the same way to measures of environmental engagement and measures of subjective
well-being; (3) under the condition that problem-focused coping has a positive relation to general
negative affect, whether this could be explained by a high degree of worry about climate change, as
was the case in the study on the 12-year-olds; (4) whether meaning-focused coping and optimism
concerning climate change serve as buffers against negative affect among the problem-focused
adolescents, as they did in the study on 12-year-olds. An additional aim was to use regression analyses
to examine (5) whether the three coping strategies have significant impacts on felt environmental
efficacy and pro-environmental behavior when controlling for already well-known predictors of
environmental engagement such as gender [39,40], perceived knowledge [3944], environmental
values [39,45,46], and social influence from/communication with parents and peers [39,47]. These are
all factors that in numerous studies have been found to be important in explaining environmental
engagement. A more thorough review of their importance is, however, beyond the scope of this paper [48].
2. Method
2.1. Procedure and Participants
The study took place during the winter/spring 2010 among senior high-school students living in five
municipalities in central Sweden. The study was conducted during regular school hours in the
classroom. Teachers were not present and the questionnaire was administered by trained test leaders.
The participants were ensured anonymity.
The sample consisted of 321 participants, 167 girls (52%) and 150 boys (47%) [49]. Their average
age was 17.2 years (SD = 0.49). In order to attain a representative distribution with respect to
socioeconomic factors, both college preparatory and vocational classes were included in the study. The
participation rate was 84%.
2.2. Measures [50,51]
The questionnaire contained: questions about age and gender; four questions about environmental
efficacy (two captured individual self-efficacy and two captured collective efficacy); twelve items
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about pro-environmental behavior (behavior in everyday life and communicating the need to do
something); five items regarding worry about climate change (negative consequences for themselves,
their close ones, future generations, people living in economically deprived countries, animals and
nature); three questions about optimism concerning climate change (see [17] for more information
about these measures). Sample items and Cronbach‘s alphas for these scales are presented in Table 1.
Different dimensions of subjective well-being [52,53] were captured with: a Swedish translation
of a seven-item scale aiming to assess young people‘s thoughts about their own lives, i.e., life
satisfaction [54]; a measure containing seven items about anxious and depressive feelings felt during
the last week, i.e., general negative affect [55]; and finally a three-item measure about general positive
affect [55]. Sample items and Cronbach‘s alphas for these scales are presented in Table 1.
Table 1. Typical items and Cronbach‘s alpha of scales included in the study.
Scale
Number
of items
Typical items
Cronbach’s
alpha
Worry about climate
change [17]
5
self, relatives, future generations, animals/ nature,
people in economically deprived countries
0.90
Pro-environmental
behavior [17]
12
Bicycle to school
Try to influence my parents
0.87
Communication peers [39]
2
Do your friends try to encourage you to become more
aware of environmental issues?
0.78
Communication parents [39]
2
Have your parents tried to make you do more for the
environment (recycling, saving energy, and so on)?
0.85
Optimismclimate
change [17]
3
I think the climate problem will be solved in the future
I believe the future looks bright when it comes to
climate change
0.81
General negative
affect [55]
7
I have worried about things I don‘t usually worry
about
I have felt down and unhappy
0.90
General positive affect [55]
3
During the last week I have felt happy
During the last week I have laughed
0.78
Environmental values [39]
4
I strongly believe that people should care for the
environment
It is important for me to adapt to and to fit into nature
0.89
Life-satisfaction [54]
7
I have a good life
I wish I had a different kind of life (rev)
0.88
Environmental efficacy [17]
4
I can do something about climate change
We together can do something about climate change
0.82
Note: In the table the scales are presented in the same order as they were presented in the questionnaire. The
coping scale, which is presented in the result section, was the second scale in the questionnaire, following the
items about worry concerning climate change.
Also included were a four-item scale about environmental values, a two-item measure about
environmental communication with parents, and a two-item measure concerning environmental
communication with peers (see [39] for more information about these scales). In Table 1, sample items
and Cronbach‘s alpha for these scales are displayed. Finally, one question about subjective knowledge
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was also included: ―How much knowledge do you think you have about climate change, global
warming?‖ The question was followed by four alternatives: ―Practically none‖, ―Rather little‖, ―Quite
a lot‖, ―Very much‖.
3. Results
3.1. Can the Three Coping Dimensions Be Replicated?
The coping scale started with the following instruction: ―When one hears about societal problems
such as climate change, one can feel worried or upset. Below is a list and for every item we would like
you to indicate how well it applies to what you do or think when you are reminded of climate change.
Choose the alternative that you feel best applies to you, and choose only one alternative per item.‖ The
response alternatives were: ―not true at all‖, ―not very true‖, ―fairly true‖, ―very true‖, and ―completely
true‖. The list included statements capturing meaning-focused coping (trust and positive reappraisal),
problem-focused coping (cognitive), and emotion-focused coping (de-emphasizing the seriousness of
climate change) (see Table 2). The items were originally taken from a qualitative study in which young
people wrote about how they cope with climate change [11], and therefore the items ought to have
high face validity (see also [17]).
Table 2. The three factor solution of the coping scale with rotated factor loadings.
Principal factor analysis
Meaning-focused coping
De-emphasizing /don’t care
Problem-focused coping
More and more
people have started to
take climate change
seriously
0.54
I think that the
problem is
exaggerated
0.61
I think about what
I myself can do
0.63
I have faith in
humanity; we can fix
all problems
0.58
I don‘t care since I
don‘t know much
about climate change
0.47
I search for
information about
what I can do
0.62
I trust scientists to
come up with a
solution in the future
0.54
Climate change is
something positive
because the summers
will get warmer
0.54
I talk with my
family and friends
about what one can
do to help
0.69
I have faith in people
engaged in
environmental
organizations
0.65
Nothing serious will
happen during my
lifetime
0.60
I trust the politicians
0.56
Climate change does
not concern those of
us living in Sweden
0.57
Even though it is a
big problem, one has
to have hope
0.51
0.74
0.72
0.75
Note: Principal axis factoring was used as the extraction method, with Varimax rotation.
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A principal factor analysis using principal axis factoring as the extraction method and Varimax as
the rotation method was conducted on the same 15 items that were included in the coping scale aimed
at the children [17]. When the item ―I can‘t be bothered to care about climate change‖ [56] was
removed, using Kaiser‘s eigenvalue criterion, the remaining 14 items fell out in three separate
subscales with acceptable Cronbach‘s alphas (see Table 2 for the items and alpha reliability). This
factor solution accounted for 53% of the total variance and the factor loadings were satisfactory (see
Table 2) [57]. Thus, the three coping scales, meaning-focused coping, problem-focused coping,
and de-emphasizing the threat, identified in the study on 12-year-olds were also found in a late
adolescents group.
The inter-correlations between the scales were: problem-focused copingmeaning focused coping,
r = 0.28 (n = 320; p 0.001); problem-focused copingde-emphasizing the threat, r = 0.47
(n = 320; p 0.001); meaning-focused copingde-emphasizing the threat, r = 0.03 (n = 320; n.s.).
Thus, the more the adolescents used problem-focused coping the more they were inclined to use
meaning-focused coping and the less they de-emphasized the threat. In addition, there was no
association between the use of meaning-focused coping and de-emphasizing the climate threat.
3.2. How Do the Different Coping Strategies Relate to Engagement and Subjective Well-Being?
In Table 3 the results of Pearson‘s correlation analyses between the three coping scales and
measures of engagement and well-being are presented. As expected, problem-focused coping and
meaning-focused coping had significant positive associations with environmental efficacy, and
pro-environmental behavior. Worth noticing is that the correlation between problem-focused coping
and pro-environmental behavior was much stronger than the correlation between meaning-focused
coping and pro-environmental behavior. Furthermore, only meaning-focused coping had a positive
relation to optimism concerning climate change. The finding that problem-focused coping did not have
a significant relation to optimism is a result that differs from the study on the 12-year-olds. As
expected, problem-focused coping was positively correlated with general negative affect, although the
correlation was not particularly strong; that is, the more problem-focused coping the adolescents used,
the more likely it was that they also experienced general negative affect in everyday life. Just as in the
study on the children, there were no significant correlations with the other measures of subjective
well-being (positive affect and life-satisfaction).
In the study on 12-year-olds, children who used a high degree of meaning-focused coping were less
likely to experience negative affect; however, the present study failed to identify any significant
relation between meaning-focused coping and negative affect (see Table 3). Still, the positive
correlations between meaning-focused coping and life satisfaction, as well as general positive affect,
were replicated. Just as in the study on 12-year-olds, while these correlations were not strong, they
were still significant.
As expected, the emotion-focused strategy of de-emphasizing the seriousness of climate change was
negatively related to environmental efficacy and pro-environmental behavior (see Table 3). However,
the results differed from the study on 12-year-olds in that this strategy did not have any significant
relation to general negative affect, while a significant positive association with optimism was identified.
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Table 3. Pearson correlations between the three coping strategies and environmental
engagement, worry, well-being, environmental values, subjective knowledge, and
communication (parents, peers).
Meaning-focused
coping
De-emphasizing/
don’t care
Problem-focused
coping
Worry about climate change
0.33 *** (n = 320)
−0.47 *** (n = 320)
0.55 *** (n = 320)
Optimism concerning
climate change
0.54 *** (n = 318)
0.15 ** (n = 318)
0.04 (n = 318)
Environmental efficacy
0.42 *** (n = 319)
0.36 *** (n = 319)
0.55 *** ( n = 319)
Pro-environmental behavior
0.30 *** (n = 320)
0.49 *** (n = 320)
0.68 *** (n = 320)
General negative affect
−0.00 (n = 319)
−0.09 (n = 319)
0.18 *** (n = 319)
General positive affect
0.20 *** (n = 319)
0.05 (n = 319)
−0.06 (n = 319)
Life satisfaction
0.18 *** (n = 318)
0.02 (n = 318)
−0.04 (n = 318)
Environmental Values
0.31 *** (n = 316)
0.49 *** (n = 316)
0.58 *** (n = 316)
Communication parents
0.23 *** (n = 319)
−0.24 *** (n = 319)
0.29 *** (n = 319)
Communication peers
0.20 *** (n = 320)
0.15 ** (n = 320)
0.34 *** (n = 320)
Subjective knowledge
0.05 (n = 319)
−0.33 *** (n = 319)
0.30 *** (n = 319)
Note: * p 0.05; ** p 0.01; *** p 0.001.
In contrast to the study on children, in the present study the correlations between the three coping
strategies, on the one hand, and environmental values, communication about environmental issues with
parents and peers, and subjective knowledge, on the other hand, were also explored. In Table 3 one can
see that problem-focused coping was positively related to all these four measures, and the same was
true for meaning-focused coping, except that there was no significant correlation with subjective
knowledge. Thus, the use of meaning-focused coping says nothing about a person‘s level of
knowledge about climate change. Finally, it is interesting to note that de-emphasizing the seriousness
of climate change was significantly negatively associated with environmental values and
communication with parents and peers, as well as with subjective knowledge (see Table 3).
3.3. Is Problem-Focused Coping Associated with General Negative Affect Because These Strategies
Make Adolescents More Worried about Climate Change?
As was the case in the study on 12-year-olds, the first step was to correlate problem-focused coping
with worry about climate change (see [17]). A significant positive association was identified, with
r = 0.55 (n = 320; p 0.001). Thereafter, a partial correlation analysis [58] was performed between
problem-focused coping and general negative affect, with worry as a control variable. When
controlling for worry, the relation between problem-focused coping and negative affect was no longer
significant, with r = 0.03 (n = 316; n.s.). Thus, it seems as if a higher degree of worry about climate
change can explain the association between problem-focused coping and general negative affect,
which is in accordance with the results in the study on 12-year-olds.
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3.4. Do Meaning-Focused Coping and Optimism Concerning Climate Change Buffer against A High
Degree of General Negative Affect for Adolescents with High Scores for Problem-Focused Coping?
Two hierarchical regression analyses were conducted in order to predict negative affect. In one,
problem-focused coping, meaning-focused coping, and their interaction term were included as
independent variables. In the other, problem-focused coping, optimism, and their interaction term were
included as independent variables. In contrast to the study on 12-year-olds, neither meaning-focused
coping nor optimism buffered against negative affect among highly problem-focused young people;
i.e., the two interaction effects were not significant.
3.5. Predicting Environmental Efficacy
A hierarchical multiple regression analysis was performed in order to discern if the three coping
strategies had significant impacts on felt environmental efficacy even when controlling for some
already well-known predictors of environmental engagement. As can be seen in Table 4, taken alone,
gender was a significant negative predictor; girls were more likely to feel efficacious concerning the
environment than boys. However, this gender effect disappeared when the other control variables were
included in the model in step two. In step three, the coping strategies were inserted and they together
explained an additional eight percent of the variance in environmental efficacy (see Table 4). Both
problem-focused coping and meaning-focused coping contributed independently and positively to
explaining felt environmental efficacy. Meaning-focused coping was the stronger of these two
predictors, and the second strongest of all the factors in the model. In contrast, de-emphasizing the
climate threat was not a significant predictor when controlling for the other factors. In addition,
environmental values and subjective knowledge were also unique significant positive predictors of
environmental efficacy, while environmental communication with peers was a significant negative
predictor. Environmental values turned out to be the most important explanatory factor in the final
model. The proportion of variance accounted for by the full model was 52%, F (8, 310) = 40.19;
p < 0.001.
Table 4. Hierarchical multiple regression models predicting environmental efficacy.
Environmental efficacy
Step 1
Step 2
Step 3
Gender (girls = 0; boys = 1)
−0.22 ***
−0.09
−0.05
Environmental values
0.56 ***
0.39 ***
Communication parents
0.05
0.00
Communication peers
−0.02
−0.10*
Subjective knowledge
0.16 ***
0.13 **
Meaning-focused coping
0.24 ***
De-emphasizing the threat
−0.05
Problem-focused coping
0.22 ***
R
2
0.05 ***
0.43 ***
0.52 ***
Adjusted R
2
0.04 ***
0.42 ***
0.50 ***
∆R
2
0.39 ***
0.08 ***
Note: * p 0.05; ** p 0.01; *** p 0.001.
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3.6. Predicting Pro-Environmental Behavior
In order to discover any possible independent contributions of the three coping strategies in
explaining pro-environmental behavior, a second hierarchical multiple regression analysis was
performed. In this case, gender was an important predictor, both alone and when the other control
variables and two of the coping strategies were held constant in steps two and three (see Table 4). The
girls were more inclined to behave pro-environmentally than the boys. However, gender did not
significantly predict pro-environmental behavior in the final step, when the all coping strategies
were included.
Because problem-focused coping is quite close to the measure of pro-environmental behavior and
because it is inter-correlated with both meaning-focused coping and de-emphasizing the threat, in the
third step only meaning-focused coping and de-emphasizing the threat were entered. As shown in
Table 4, these two coping strategies were independent predictors of pro-environmental behavior, with
meaning-focused coping being a positive predictor, and de-emphasizing being a negative predictor.
Finally, in the fourth step, problem-focused coping was entered and was found to be an independent
significant positive predictor, in this case the most potent explanatory factor. Meaning-focused coping
lost its significance when problem-focused coping was entered into the model, while de-emphasizing
remained a significant negative predictor. Together, the three coping strategies contributed an
additional 10 percent of the variance in pro-environmental behavior (see Table 5). Furthermore,
subjective knowledge, environmental communication with both peers and parents, and environmental
values were significant predictors in the fourth step, and in all these cases the relations were positive.
The final model accounted for 61 percent of the variance, F (8, 310) = 58.10; p < 0.001.
Table 5. Hierarchical multiple regression models predicting reported pro-environmental behavior.
Pro-environmental behavior
Step 1
Step 2
Step 3
Step 4
Gender (girls = 0; boys = 1)
−0.22 ***
−0.09 *
−0.09 *
−0.05
Environmental values
0.46 ***
0.35 ***
0.24 ***
Communication parents
0.15 ***
0.12 **
0.11 **
Communication peers
0.21 ***
0.20 ***
0.13***
Subjective knowledge
0.18 ***
0.14 ***
0.10 *
Meaning-focused coping
0.11 **
0.07
De-emphasizing the threat
−0.20 ***
−0.12 **
Problem-focused coping
0.35 ***
R
2
0.05 ***
0.51 ***
0.54 ***
0.61 ***
Adjusted R
2
0.05 ***
0.50 ***
0.53 ***
0.60 ***
∆R
2
0.46 ***
0.03 ***
0.07 ***
Note: * p 0.05; ** p 0.01; *** p 0.001.
4. Discussion
In the present study the relations between how adolescents cope psychologically with climate
change, on the one hand, and environmental engagement and measures of subjective well-being, on the
Sustainability 2013, 5 2202
other, were investigated. The results were compared with a previous study conducted with a group of
12-year-olds [17], and many of the most important results were replicated.
4.1. Problem-Focused Coping
The finding that late adolescents who think, talk, and search for information about what they
personally can do when it comes to climate change, i.e. who use a high degree of problem-focused
coping, also experience more general negative affect than those who do not, supports earlier studies
indicating that the use of problem-focused coping in relation to, for the individual, more or less
uncontrollable stressors such as societal problems is related to a high degree of stress [5,1517]. Even
though this coping strategy was also associated with a higher degree of environmental efficacy and
more pro-environmental behavior, the search for information can make young people more worried
about climate change, perhaps because the seriousness and complexity of this problem become more
visible. For instance, media, a common source of information, often report in a paradoxical way about
the apocalyptic nature of the climate problem at the same time as individuals‘ moral responsibility to
do something about the problem is emphasized [34,59,60].
However, since this is only a correlation study, one cannot be certain that problem-focused coping
evokes worry about climate change that, in turn, causes negative affect in general among the young.
Even though there are some prior studies supporting the link between worry about global
environmental problems and low well-being, they are all cross-sectional [6163]. An alternative
explanation could be that worry about climate change to some extent is a sub-type of a general
tendency to experience anxious and depressive feelings in everyday life, as sometimes seems to be the
case with nuclear worry (see [64,65]). If so, young people who experience a high degree of negative
affect in general also worry more about climate change, and this worry then makes them search for
information on what they can do about the problem, that is, makes them use more problem-focused
coping. There are a large number of studies showing that worry focuses people‘s attention on the
problem, which leads to a search for possible solutions (for a review, see [66]).
4.2. Meaning-Focused Coping and Optimism
This is the first study on adolescents, and the second study on young people including children,
showing that those who use meaning-focused coping to a high degree feel more general positive affect,
life-satisfaction, and optimism concerning climate change, and in addition behave more
pro-environmentally and experience stronger feelings of environmental efficacy, than adolescents who
use this coping strategy to a lesser degree. These results also support findings on coping in a proximal
context showing the positive relations between meaning-focused coping and positive emotions as well
as taking an active stance towards the stressor at hand [20,67].
A difference from the study on 12-year-olds was identified; meaning-focused coping did not have a
significant negative relation to general negative affect [17]. This is not, however, a surprising result if
one takes into account the original theory about this coping strategy. This theory emphasizes that
meaning-focused strategies, first and foremost, are used to activate positive emotions, not to get rid of
negative emotions, and that negative and positive affect are independent [20]. That a significant
correlation was still identified among the 12-year-olds may be explained by the fact that positive and
Sustainability 2013, 5 2203
negative emotions tend not to be as independent among children as among adults, i.e., children to a
higher degree perceive positive and negative emotions as opposite poles of one dimension and more
seldom experience mixed emotions [68,69]. Thus, using meaning-focused coping to a high degree may
perhaps be incompatible with feeling negative affect among children.
In contrast to the study on 12-year-olds [17], meaning-focused coping and optimism concerning
climate change did not shield adolescents using a high degree of problem-focused coping from general
negative affect. This could be due to some weaknesses with the design of this study, though it could
also be a result that is specific to the age-group in focus. Since earlier studies indicate that late
adolescents in general feel more helpless about global problems than children do, probably because
they better understand the difficulty and complexity of these threats [11,70,71], trusting different
societal actors, being able to reverse one‘s perspective, and being optimistic are perhaps not enough to
counteract the negative emotions related to problem-focused coping. Future studies should investigate
whether there are other more general factors, such as a sense of meaning in life, which can protect
against a high degree of negative affect among highly problem-focused adolescents.
Also of interest is that in this study optimism about climate change was more related to the use of
de-emphasizing strategies than to problem-focused coping, with which no significant association was
identified. This is in contrast to the study on 12-year-olds where children scoring high on optimism
used more problem-focused coping, and where no relation to de-emphasizing the threat was found [17].
These diverging results could perhaps be explained by the fact that optimism is seen by some
researchers as being closely related to wishful thinking [72]. While wishful thinking among children
can be an age-appropriate way of dealing with threats, and therefore be related to pro-social behavior,
among older persons it is rather a way to avoid taking on responsibility (see [73,74]). In relation to
climate change Homburg and colleagues [5] found that wishful thinking among adults was negatively
related to problem solving and positively related to denial of guilt. Furthermore, studies have shown
that hope concerning climate change is a multifaceted concept; it can be based on both constructive
meaning-focused strategies and denial-like coping (see [11,39]). In this regard it is worth noticing that
in this study optimism was significantly positively related to both de-emphasizing the threat and
meaning-focused coping, while these two coping strategies were not correlated with each other.
4.3. Emotion-Focused Coping, De-emphasizing the Climate Threat
Like the 12-year-olds, the adolescents who de-emphasized the seriousness of climate change, for
instance by thinking that the climate problem is exaggerated, were less likely to feel a high degree of
environmental efficacy and to behave pro-environmentally [17]. This result is also in accordance with
at least one study on adults [5].
It is also interesting to note that adolescents who de-emphasized the climate threat scored lower on
environmental values than those who did not deny the seriousness of the climate problem, which lends
support to studies on adults showing that denial of, or skepticism concerning, climate change is closely
related to specific world-views and values (see [36,37,75,76]). That de-emphasizing was significantly
negatively related to subjective knowledge about climate change should, however, be interpreted
cautiously, since one of the items included in this scale concerned not caring about climate change
because one does not know enough about the problem.
Sustainability 2013, 5 2204
4.4. Strengths, Limitations and Future Research
Some strengths and limitations of this study should be noted. The main strength of this study is that
it is the first that investigates the relations between coping with climate change and measures of both
environmental engagement and subjective well-being among adolescents. As such it can provide
valuable information to, for instance, teachers and parents who want to help young people to take on the
climate challenge. The study also extends many of the results found in a similar study on 12-year-olds [17]
and, thereby, takes important steps towards a more general picture of the implications of these coping
strategies for environmental engagement and well-being. Nevertheless, there is still a need for more
studies. For instance, do the results of the two studies performed only apply to Swedish young people
or do children and adolescents in other countries cope the same way with climate change? If so, are the
relations to engagement and well-being the same? Another weakness is that this study is cross-
sectional; experimental and longitudinal studies should be performed in order to find out more about
the causal relations between the factors of interest.
Although exploring the relations between the three coping strategies and communication with
parents and peers about environmental issues was not the main aim of this study, it is still interesting to
note that adolescents who used meaning-focused and problem-focused coping to deal with the climate
problem also communicated more about environmental issues with their parents and peers. Those who
utilized de-emphasizing as a coping strategy instead talked less with their parents and peers about
environmental issues. These results are in accordance with prior research showing the significance of
discussions with parents and friends for emotion regulation and coping at an individual level among
young people (for a review see [77]). These previous studies have, however, only focused upon
emotion regulation in a proximal context, and therefore the results of the present study are the first to
indicate that communication patterns about societal issues also could influence coping with societal
threats. In future research it would be interesting to study in more detail which factors can explain the
use of different coping strategies in relation to climate change among different groups of young people.
4.5. Practical Implications
The study has practical implications for education for sustainable development. Teachers need to
take young people‘s emotions about climate change seriously and encourage them to verbalize them.
In this way, different ways of coping with climate change can be discerned. In order to counteract the
negative affect related to cognitive problem-focused strategies, teachers can help their pupils to find
concrete actions concerning climate change and let them work together on these issues. Negative affect
can be turned into something constructive when one feels some control over the problem [78]. Taking
collective rather than individual action in the face of global environmental problems can also promote
well-being [79].
Furthermore, to promote meaning-focused coping, teachers can help their pupils to challenge overly
pessimistic views about climate change with realistic positive thinking [39]. They can also invite
different societal actors, such as scientists and politicians, into the classroom. These could be people
who work with issues related to climate change and who are optimistic despite the complexity of the
problem. In this way trust can be promoted. Teachers should not, of course, promote blind trust.
Sustainability 2013, 5 2205
However, in order to avoid cynicism, it is important to show teenagers that some adults do care about
these issues [80]. This is an important complement to critical thinking. Otherwise, feelings of
helplessness and hopelessness can arise, which are not beneficial for an active approach to climate change.
In addition, because de-emphasizing the threat was related to less knowledge about climate change,
more information about climate change could perhaps counteract this way of coping. However,
teachers need to take care, because de-emphasizing also seems to be related to specific world-views,
and studies have shown that concerning climate change, more scientific facts are only effective for
those with egalitarian world-views [75]. Here, focusing on co-benefits of climate change actions, for
instance scientific and economic progress, could be a constructive approach, since research has shown
that it can motivate adult climate change skeptics to behave pro-environmentally [81]. The negative
relation to environmental efficacy also suggests that trying to increase general self-efficacy among this
group could be beneficial.
Acknowledgments
This study was supported by research grants to the author from the Swedish Research
Council Formas.
Conflict of Interest
The author declares no conflict of interest.
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© 2013 by the author; licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article
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... One strategy to address climate anxiety is problem-focused coping, which requires an individual to identify a means to solve a problem (e.g., what can I do to stop climate change). In terms of climate change, problem-focused coping is challenging because climate change cannot be easily solved or controlled by an individual and can; therefore, result in an increase in anxiety (Hayes, 2020;Ojala, 2013;. However, increased anxiety is not necessarily detrimental as individuals who experienced high and increasing levels of climate anxiety often have higher rates of societal engagement and activism (Helm et al., 2018;Ojala, 2013;Sciberras & Fernado, 2022). ...
... In terms of climate change, problem-focused coping is challenging because climate change cannot be easily solved or controlled by an individual and can; therefore, result in an increase in anxiety (Hayes, 2020;Ojala, 2013;. However, increased anxiety is not necessarily detrimental as individuals who experienced high and increasing levels of climate anxiety often have higher rates of societal engagement and activism (Helm et al., 2018;Ojala, 2013;Sciberras & Fernado, 2022). ...
... Meaning-focused coping proposes that effective coping requires "1) the need for dealing with emotions sufficiently/adequately and developing emotional skills (emotion-focused coping) and 2) the need for sufficient/adequate opportunities to act and be active (problemfocused coping)" (Pihkala, 2019, p. 11). Meaning-focused coping results in increased activism, environmental efficacy, and overall optimism about climate change thereby decreasing climate anxiety (Ojala, 2013). Since meaning-focused coping focuses on activating positive emotions and not on getting rid of negative emotions optimism is increased and climate anxiety is decreased (Ojala, 2013). ...
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This study examines 450 Omani in-service science teachers' (ISSTs) perceptions and ‎anxiety about climate change and its corresponding impact on their teaching practices. An ‎online questionnaire was applied to the Omani ISSTs. It consisted of 31 questions ‎pertaining to six domains: perception of climate change, reported level of climate anxiety, ‎level of stress caused by climate change, the impact of climate anxiety on cognitive ‎functioning, the impact of climate anxiety on physiological function, and teaching practices ‎pertaining to climate change. Descriptive and ANOVA statistical analyses showed that ‎Omani ISSTs’ perception of climate change was affected by their science specialization but ‎not their gender. The findings suggest that the Omani ISSTs had a high level of anxiety ‎about climate change. Their teaching practices pertaining to climate change are significantly ‎negative related to both their perception and level of climate change anxiety‏.
... One strategy to address climate anxiety is problem-focused coping, which requires an individual to identify a means to solve a problem (e.g., what can I do to stop climate change). In terms of climate change, problem-focused coping is challenging because climate change cannot be easily solved or controlled by an individual and can; therefore, result in an increase in anxiety (Hayes, 2020;Ojala, 2013;. However, increased anxiety is not necessarily detrimental as individuals who experienced high and increasing levels of climate anxiety often have higher rates of societal engagement and activism (Helm et al., 2018;Ojala, 2013;Sciberras & Fernado, 2022). ...
... In terms of climate change, problem-focused coping is challenging because climate change cannot be easily solved or controlled by an individual and can; therefore, result in an increase in anxiety (Hayes, 2020;Ojala, 2013;. However, increased anxiety is not necessarily detrimental as individuals who experienced high and increasing levels of climate anxiety often have higher rates of societal engagement and activism (Helm et al., 2018;Ojala, 2013;Sciberras & Fernado, 2022). ...
... Meaning-focused coping proposes that effective coping requires "1) the need for dealing with emotions sufficiently/adequately and developing emotional skills (emotion-focused coping) and 2) the need for sufficient/adequate opportunities to act and be active (problemfocused coping)" (Pihkala, 2019, p. 11). Meaning-focused coping results in increased activism, environmental efficacy, and overall optimism about climate change thereby decreasing climate anxiety (Ojala, 2013). Since meaning-focused coping focuses on activating positive emotions and not on getting rid of negative emotions optimism is increased and climate anxiety is decreased (Ojala, 2013). ...
... Thirteen focused on understanding the interplay between climaterelated concerns and other negative emotions, with aspects of mental health such as psychological distress, depression and wellbeing, but also hope, and coping mechanisms (El Zoghbi & El Ansari, 2014;Kerret et al., 2020;Li & Monroe, 2017;MacDonald et al., 2015;Ogunbode et al., 2021;Ojala, 2005Ojala, , 2012aOjala, , 2012bOjala, , 2013Reyes et al., 2021;Schwartz et al., 2022;Sciberras & Fernando, 2022;Stevenson & Peterson, 2015). One clinical case report focused on climate change-related psychotic features (Wolf & Salo, 2008). ...
... This further supports the argument that young people are likely to be at higher risk for the detrimental effects of climate-related worry (Vergunst & Berry, 2021 (Ojala, 2005(Ojala, , 2012a. Specifically, meaning-focused coping (such as the belief that "more and more people have started to take climate change seriously") was associated with improved wellbeing and reduced negative affect, while problem-focused coping (such as "thinking about what I myself can do") was associated with higher negative affect (Ojala, 2012b(Ojala, , 2013. Findings from this group also showed that worry about the environment could co-occur with both positive and negative wellbeing, suggesting that coping may act to support wellbeing without impacting level of worry. ...
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Background: Climate change represents a serious threat to human health, including mental health, due to both the traumatizing effects of extreme climate events and the psychological effect of worry about climate change. Objectives: This scoping review aims to search the literature for original research investigating mental health and climate-related negative emotions in young people. Findings will help to understand the current landscape, gaps in the literature, and provide recommendations for future youth mental health research and practice. Methods: A scoping review of the literature examining negative emotions associated with climate change in young people was undertaken. Studies published prior to March 2022 were included if they examined mental ill-health (e.g., symptoms of depression or anxiety) or negative emotions (e.g., distress, worry, concern) associated with the threat of climate change. Results: Of 3939 articles screened, 26 met the inclusion criteria. Together, studies show that young people are worried about climate change. Negative emotions about climate change were correlated with symptoms of mental ill-health. Studies also explored coping strategies young people use to manage their distress caused by climate change. Discussion: The limited literature in this area indicates a key gap in youth mental health research. While available evidence suggests that young people are concerned about climate change, more research is needed on the relationship between climate-related negative emotions and mental ill-health. Clinicians should assess for and address climate-related negative emotions in young people. Mental health leaders are urged to advocate for actions to mitigate the mental health impact of climate change.
... However, young people are not a homogeneous group. In groups of adolescents, young adults, and even children, a minority denies or de-emphasizes the seriousness of climate change (Leiserowitz et al., 2011;Ojala, 2012Ojala, , 2013Stevenson et al., 2014;Tejada et al., 2020). Although similarities have been observed compared with adults, such as higher levels of climate change denial among those with male gender, individualistic, hierarchical, and hedonistic values, and antiimmigration views (Ojala, 2015a(Ojala, , 2015bStevenson et al., 2014;Zummo et al., 2021), some other mechanisms may also be relevant in younger populations (Stanley & Wilson, 2019). ...
... The few studies that have explored climate change denial among young people identify low environmental efficacy as consistently associated with climate denial (Ojala, 2013(Ojala, , 2015a(Ojala, , 2015b. In addition, one study showed that denialbased hope among adolescents was related to a feeling of low self-efficacy regarding societal problems in general (Ojala, 2015b). ...
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Science denial has adverse consequences at individual and societal levels and even for the future of our planet. The present article aimed to answer the question: What leads people to deny even the strongest evidence and distrust the scientific method? The article provides a narrative review of research on the underpinnings of science denial, with the main focus on climate change denial. Perspectives that are commonly studied separately are integrated. We review key findings on the roles of disinformation and basic cognitive processes, motivated reasoning (focusing on ideology and populism), and emotion regulation in potentially shaping (or not shaping) views on science and scientific topics. We also include research on youth, a group in an important transition phase in life that is the future decision-makers but less commonly focused on in the research field. In sum, we describe how the manifestations of denial can stem from cognitive biases, motivating efforts to find seemingly rational support for desirable conclusions, or attempts to regulate emotions when feeling threatened or powerless. To foster future research agendas and mindful applications of the results, we identify some research gaps (most importantly related to cross-cultural considerations) and examine the unique features or science denial as an object of psychological research. Based on the review, we make recommendations on measurement, science communication, and education.
... Applied to climate worry, micro climate worry would entail a worry that climate change will have negative consequences for oneself or one's family and friends, while macro climate worry would entail a worry that climate change will have consequences for animals and plants, people in poorer countries, or future generations. Although aggregated measures of worry capturing all these dimensions have been used before (see Ojala, 2012Ojala, , 2013b, to our knowledge, empirical studies examining how macro and micro worries separately relate to coping, well-being, and engagement concerning climate change are missing. ...
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Few studies have explored climate-change worry in an in-depth manner among adolescents. Through survey studies with two cohorts of adolescents (2010, 2020) we investigated relations between different forms of climate-change worry, mental well-being, and pro-environmental behavior and what role coping plays in these relationships. Results show that climate-change worry was negatively associated with subjective well-being, and positively associated with climate pessimism and pro-environmental behavior. Relations were strongest between macro-worry and pro-environmental behavior, and between micro-worry and mental well-being. Problem-focused coping was a mediator between worry and pro-environmental behavior and between meaning-focused coping and behavior, while distancing decreased the positive relation between worry and problem-focused coping. Meaning-focused coping and optimism worked as buffers between macro-and micro-worry and pessimism in some, but not all, cases. Most relationships remained significant when controlling for other variables in path-models. Finally, worry was more prevalent in the 2020 cohort. Our findings highlight the need to consider different forms of worry and coping in studies about climate-change worry.
... This may be linked to the social dimension of psychological distance, as people may be more inclined to believe that climate change will affects others negatively rather than themselves. Remaining optimistic about the climate crisis has been found to contribute to personal wellbeing and indicates a self-protection mechanism (Ojala, 2013). ...
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Engaging with the future to make better decisions in the present is key for sustainable development and climate change responses. In this conceptual paper, we suggest a scenario building approach that connects psychological principles of future thinking with future scenario development in order to advance the impact of scenarios. Future scenario work currently does not sufficiently consider processes of human communication, emotion, cognition and has only begun to focus on people’s local contexts in recent years. We argue that more understanding of psychological processes, such as cognitive biases and heuristics, as well as psychological distance, which typically occur in future thinking, can improve the impact of scenarios. Specifically, we provide a psychological basis for systematically integrating emotion-evoking aspects into future scenario development, using tailored narratives and visuals to make content tangible and meaningful for a broad spectrum of audiences, and adapting content temporally, spatially, and linguistically to audiences, in combination with inclusive and creative co-creation of scenarios and sustainable solutions. We explain why this approach has the potential to overcome some recognised cognitive biases hampering scenario impact and intended sustainable change processes, and can therefore support the co-development of sustainable and inclusive policies and solutions that empower and connect individuals, communities, and decision makers.
... Lorsque les jeunes sont entourés par une famille, des amis ou des professeurs qui reconnaissent la réalité des changements climatiques, ils sont non seulement plus à même de les reconnaître eux même, mais, surtout, plus à même d'agir. Enfin, même si les groupes de pairs prennent une importance majeure durant l'adolescence, on note que l'influence de la famille nucléaire reste déterminante chez les 15-24 ans (Ojala, 2013). Pour résumer, nous retrouvons ici pratiquement les mêmes variables que pour les perceptions climatiques. ...
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Comment les jeunes Belges envisagent-ils leur avenir ? Fil conducteur de cette recherche, cette question nous permet d'interroger les perspectives d'une jeunesse diverse. Ces perspectives touchent à la fois leur compréhension et leur perception des phénomènes associés aux changements climatiques, leurs manières de s'informer sur la question, ainsi que leur vision concernant l'éducation qu'ils ont reçue et l'avenir que leur réserve le marché du travail.Pour appréhender empiriquement ces questions, une double enquête de terrain a été conduite. Une première partie quantitative a permis de dégager des tendances de pratiques et de perceptions des différentes catégories de jeunes prétriés selon des critères sociodémographiques. Une seconde partie qualitative a permis d'affiner ces données grâce à des focus groups sondant l'opinion des jeunes Belges les plus précaires. Ce travail de terrain confirme la pertinence de considérer une grande diversité au sein du groupe social « jeune » (15-24 ans), puisque des différences considérables sont observées, notamment entre les catégories socioéconomiques, mais aussi entre les classes d'âge.Pour dépasser ces constats et approfondir l'analyse segmentée des jeunes, des personae ont été constitués. Ainsi, sept profils de jeunes exclusifs les uns des autres sont dégagés, non pas dans l’objectif de ranger les jeunes dans des cases, mais pour proposer des solutions personnalisées en fonction de leurs différentes pratiques et valeurs.Les résultats de cette recherche permettent la formulation de recommandations concernant aussi bien les perspectives de communication climatique à l'égard des jeunes que les perspectives politiques à mettre en oeuvre pour encourager leur participation. Ces recommandations sont formulées de manière générale, mais aussi spécifiquement pour chaque persona identifiée. Enfin, les recommandations émanant autant des jeunes eux-mêmes que des experts ayant réalisé l’étude.
... Meaning-focused coping has been shown to intervene in the transactional stress process, 89 potentially promote wellbeing and environmental engagement, 112 and positively relate to well-being and optimism. 113 The current findings corroborate these results and Folkman's 89 appraisal that coping strategies (emotion-, problem-, and meaning-focused) operate in concert during crisis. Prior research suggests that use of coping strategies depends on proximity or controllability of a situation and the fear it provokes. ...
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Scientists caution against ignoring human-induced climate change and related health repercussions, with a growing body of literature highlighting the mental health effects of climate change and the importance of understanding coping and adaptation strategies. Less is known, however, about sustainable personal practices fortifying mental health in the context of climate change. The present study sought to investigate how long-term yoga practitioners (yoga therapists or yoga teachers) in Australia with a lived experience of climate change-related events are coping and adapting. The aim was to better understand participants' reports of climate change-related experiences and how yoga influences their mental health and choices in the face of climate change. Eleven in-depth telephone interviews were conducted and analyzed using an interpretive phenomenological methodology. Participants reported that their ongoing relationship with yoga influences how they cope with climate change-related stressors and their being-in-the-world, and how concern for all life bolsters their responses to climate change. The results illustrate the part yoga may play in supporting long-term practitioners to prepare for, cope with, and respond to climate change events and impacts. Offering inclusive, interdisciplinary yoga therapy and community-based networks fostering ethical living and response flexibility may prove beneficial not only for the mental health and coping ability of participants, but for the planet.
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Chapter
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