Understanding the Spectrum of Anxiety Responses to Climate Change: A Systematic Review of the Qualitative Literature
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Search Strategy
2.2. Inclusion and Exclusion Criteria
2.3. Quality Rating
2.4. Data Extraction and Thematic Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Study Characteristics
3.2. Thematic Analysis
3.2.1. Themes Related to the Scope of Climate Change Anxiety
Worry about Threats to Livelihood
“Maybe in the future our plants can’t grow and we have to go buy them from the market”[36] (p. 105)
“You need water, like you can’t survive without that so I do worry about…access to clean water”[26] (p. 78)
“as with most, my worries generally stem from financial stress”[29] (p. 91)
“I know I’ll be leaving soon, but when news comes that Tuvalu is affected or will sink, it makes me cry. Because I was born here, I’m Tuvaluan”[27] (p. 4)
“I’m afraid we’re really gonna start getting hit with like massive tornadoes. That’s my biggest fear”[30] (p. 6)
“A disaster for some may mean prosperity for others – as polar ice melts, we might benefit as more shipping traffic comes through this area”[24] (p. 292)
“Answering the challenge and being part of the climate change solution can have a multitude of immediate and long-term benefits for business”[35] (p. 1572)
“Let’s face it, people have already seen extreme weather events in the past. Very bad ones. So they keep finding innovative ways of dealing with the weather changes. That’s why we are aware but don’t generally worry about environmental changes”[32] (p. 52)
Worry for Future Generations
“We are actually taking our planet on a crash course and as a grandmother, I am deeply, deeply, deeply concerned about this. I have a one-year-old granddaughter now. You know we are leaving nothing for her”[26] (p. 80)
“Hope may come from education”[23] (p. 67)
Worry about Apocalyptic Futures
“Something like this will happen to humans; we cannot prevent destroying the earth…we will die”[23] (p. 68)
Anxiety at the Perceived Lack of Response to Climate Change
“The first thing I associate when I hear climate change is terrified, you know. People don’t think it exists, or it’s happening, or nobody is going to do anything about it”[30] (p. 5)
Gaining Perspective—Competing Worries
“There’s so much to be worried about, it’s diluted you know, what we have time to talk about”[30] (p. 5)
“Climate change is the least of my worries”[25] (p. 6)
3.2.2. Themes in Responses to Climate Change Anxiety
Symptoms of Anxiety
“Sometimes I want to sleep, but I can’t because those thoughts about climate change keep popping up…thoughts about this distract me from my study”[27] (p. 4)
Feeling Helpless and Disempowered
“I feel that you resign a little, this is too big. This makes you feel like: Help, what can you do other than trouble yourself?”[34] (p. 785)
“some of the information is too extreme, so if those projections happen we’re finished anyway”[25] (p. 7)
Managing Climate Change Anxiety
- Distancing and avoidance
“I do not think it [global warming] is as human-made…as it allegedly is, according to the tabloids…I do not think it is as bad as they want to describe it”[34] (p. 789)
“I barely think about climate change now. It’s in the background of my life all the time, but I rarely sit and actually talk about climate change or read very much about it”[28] (p. 230)
“I think a lot of scientists convey the impression that they have no feelings at all about these issues”[28] (p. 236)
- b.
- Taking action
“Action, not worry, solves the problem”[29] (p. 91)
“Action is the antidote to despair”[28] (p. 229)
- c.
- Fostering support
“We build into it after the event, doing something where we talk about the emotions of how to deal with that”[28] (p. 234)
- d.
- Adapting
“There are so many things we don’t know. We adapt. We’ve always adapted”[24] (p. 291)
“I see the changes and how they are affecting my farm but I am changing how I am farming in response to climate change rather than being depressed by it”[29] (p. 91)
- e.
- Optimism and hope
“You have to feel hope to make things any better. If no one felt hope then you might as well give up”[37] (p. 547)
“Because a lot of people are working, planting new trees, dealing with the waste and exhaust fumes from cars”[37] (p. 549)
“I guess I’ve always been a bit of an optimist and you have to be in this game. I’ve got a hope in terms of human ingenuity that we all trade out of this somehow”[35] (p. 1569)
3.2.3. The Intersection of Anxiety, Sadness, and Solastalgia
“Seeing the changes makes me feel sad because people are not engaged…in helping protect the village and community”[36] (p. 105)
“Now I do not feel spring or fall weather as much now...I feel like I lost something”[23] (p. 68)
“What we are doing to mother nature. Mother nature is now weeping”[33] (p. 686)
4. Discussion
4.1. Solastalgia and Sadness
4.2. Clinical Implications
4.3. Strengths and Limitations of the Included Papers
4.4. Strengths and Limitations of the Review
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Author, Year, Country of Study | Design and Methodology | Aim | Participants and Setting | Anxiety Themes Identified (Including Themes about Worry Where Relevant) | Other Themes Identified | Factors Influencing Experience of Climate Change | Quality Rating and Comments |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Anghelcev et al. 2015 South Korea | Semi-structured interviews and photo elicitation Zaltman metaphor elicitation technique (ZMET) and narrative thematic analysis | Primary: to illustrate the applicability of using ZMET in social marketing communication Secondary: to explore how climate change is perceived by young members of the Korean public | n = 12 (M 6, F 6) Age range 20–28 South Korean college students Half undergraduate and half graduate | Affective distress (fear, nostalgia, sadness) was one of 3 “deep metaphors” found Fear: apocalyptic futures (doomsday scenarios promoted by media) Fear accompanied by anxiety symptoms (feeling of suffocation, inevitable destruction) | Sadness (loss of world as we know it, futility of individual action and inability to reverse climate change) Nostalgia (memories of idealised past) Pandora’s box -tragic endings (loss of biodiversity and human habitat) - human greed (corporate greed for profits, selfish pursuit of comfort and gratification) -hope (education as agent of positive change, stricter governmental control) Two-faced Janus - discursive ambivalence (dual standards of accountability, ambivalent media discourse) - functional duality (technology as cause and solution, home as space of consumption and mitigation) | Participants perceived climate change as something geographically or temporally distant (not a direct threat or happening to them) | B -No information on ethical considerations -Bias in sampling (personal solicitation) -Quotes not matched to demographic data -No respondent validation -No reflexivity or consideration of cultural factors |
Du Bray et al. 2017 Fiji, Cyprus, New Zealand, United Kingdom | Open-ended individual ethnographic interviews Interviews autocoded for positive and negative emotion words (counting of intext references) The method of qualitative data analysis of interview texts was not described | “To understand how emotional responses to climate change are inequitably distributed across people living in island nations with varying climate change vulnerability” (p. 1) | n = 272 Residents in 4 island nations: Fiji (n = 68), Cyprus (n = 40), New Zealand (n = 86), United Kingdom (n = 78) Gender and ages not provided | Fiji: worry about land, people, community, plants not growing, loss of self-sufficiency and cultural traditions Cyprus: worry about the future, rise of sea level, water scarcity, how to adapt to change New Zealand: worry about friends and family, speed of change, rise of global disasters UK: worry about grandchildren, population changes (incoming refugees) | Fiji: happiness and sorrow, pride in cultural heritage, sad at loss of livelihood traditions, new opportunities with relocation of younger generation Cyprus: concern/frustration with water shortage, anger/helplessness. Sadness about rainfall changes, unable to trust local agriculture NZ: sad at ecological loss. Hope for future generations, optimism UK: neutral, felt would not be impacted, cannot control climate change, therefore must not become upset about it | Island nations are vulnerable to climate change to varying degrees (UK and NZ less vulnerable, more adaptive capacity, Cyrus and Fiji more vulnerable with less adaptive capacity) | C -Poor description of context -Insufficient demographic information on participants -Sampling strategy not documented -No justification of sample size/data saturation -Data recording method unclear -Qualitative data analysis not recorded -No validation of findings -No consideration of limitations -No reflexivity or ethics considered |
Du Bray et al. 2017 USA | Participant observation and mixed-method survey (16 open ended interview questions and 21 survey questions) Counting and coding of emotion words (KWIC (keywords-in-context) approach) Themes emerged deductively from the pattern of questioning The method of analysis is unclear | Primary: to determine “how emotional responses to climate change vary across sites with different experiences and projected outcomes as a result of climate change” (p. 286) Secondary: to determine “whether men or women were more likely to express emotions across these three sites” (p. 286) | n = 103 (M 50, F 53) Ages not provided Residents of 3 US cities: Mobile, Alabama (31), Kodiak, Alaska (36), and Phoenix, Arizona (36) | Worry and sadness for future generations Worry about financial issues/loss of livelihood (access to resources) or being unable to give children same livelihood opportunities Concern about changes to landscape Lack of worry in those who believe that climate change does not affect current generation Site specific: Alabama—worry for others but more worried by other natural events (hurricanes, storm water runoff) which will be made worse with climate change. Uncertainty and adaptation Alaska—anxiety was not a prominent theme Arizona—less emotional about climate change overall. Concern for younger generation (not have same experience) | Alabama: Large number of respondents did not believe in anthropogenic climate change Participants felt more prepared, able to adapt than other sites Alaska: Many respondents believed in anthropogenic climate change, (31% did not) Participants more likely to express hope for future, optimism or feeling safe, though there are others who anticipate negative consequences Some anticipated positive changes Arizona: Participants were least likely to indicate emotional reaction to climate change Resignation, unconcerned, feeling climate change is inevitable | USA less immediately impacted by climate change Alabama: Susceptible to hurricanes, coastal vulnerability, fishing/agriculture reliance Alaska: Fishing/wilderness reliance, Indigenous way of life is vulnerable to climate change Arizona: Urbanised environment, buffered from local ecology Gender: women more likely than men to evoke “worry”. Men worried about financial survival and livelihood. Women worried about future generations | B -Sampling strategy poorly described -Data collection and recording unclear -Method of analysis (counting keywords) is not the most appropriate to answer the study question in depth -Few quotes, not matched to demographic data -No validation of findings -No discussion of reflexivity or limitations -Good demographic description -Content validity through pre-testing -Some triangulation in data collection (field notes, participant observation, interviews) -Trustworthiness through deliberate selection of similar and different views |
Fleming et al 2015 Australia | Mixed-method telephone survey (open-ended and Likert-scaled responses) and literature review Qualitative analysis using constructivist interpretations of grounded theory; used NVivo9 software Quantitative analysis: scaled responses were incorporated into codes, categories, and themes | To examine “how grape growers in this region perceive and prioritise climate change adaptation as an issue for their industry” | n = 50 Gender and ages not provided Grape growers in South Australia 50/68 = 74% response rate | Grape growers who were sceptical about climate change did not feel it would bring risks or opportunities Those who were convinced of it perceived greater risks | 58% were sceptical of anthropogenic climate change Focus of worry not related to climate change included themes of: Significant concerns -immediate stress (cash flow, lack of succession, dwindling communities with limited labour access, lack of transparency) -loss of enjoyment in lifestyle Perceptions of climate change: scepticism Coping with stress -committed farmer -exiting the industry -positive outliers | High degree of scepticism about climate change influenced perception of risks and tendency towards action | A -Good response rate -Quality content analysis -Ethics approval -Identification of outliers validates results -Data collection not well recorded -No data saturation -Limited demographic data provided -No reflexivity discussed |
Galway 2019 Canada | Semi-structured walking interviews Thematic analysis | “(1) To examine how community members of Thunder Bay understand, and think about the issue of climate change; (2) To examine how community members of Thunder Bay perceive climate change impacts and action; and (3) To consider the role of place in relation to climate change perceptions in the context of Thunder Bay” (p. 69) | n = 18 (M 8, F 10) Ages 20s–70s Residents in a remote city in Northern Ontario, Canada | Fear and concern/worry were most commonly reported emotions Worry for children and future generations Worry about future access to water, food, forests | Climate change as complex and interconnected Causes of climate change (fossil fuel industry, industrialisation, capitalism, greed, etc.) Climate (in)justice and ethics (intergenerational, marginalised communities) Taking notice of changes in the weather, seasons and extreme events Anticipated future impacts on water, food and forests -Perceptions shaped by experiences on land and water -Transformation at a range of levels, by a range of actors is needed to address climate change Other emotions included hopeful, frustrated, sense of urgency, depressed, angry/upset, guilt, sad | The importance of place, connection to local ecology Local and regional settings and relationships to this land/water/outdoors Extreme flood 2012 repeatedly referenced by participants | B -No data saturation to justify sample size -No triangulation -Quotes not matched to demographic data -Only one person analysing data -No validation of findings -Little discussion of limitations or alternative explanations -No reflexivity -Themes not explicitly presented -Questions pilot tested for clarity |
Gibson et al 2020 Tuvalu | Mixed methods: structured interview with open and closed questions Questionnaire: culturally adapted Hopkins Symptom Checklist-25 Quantitative analysis: descriptive, correlational, and between-group analysis Qualitative analysis: method poorly described | To determine if residents in Tuvalu report distress on account of both local and abstract climate change To examine the extent to which reported distress impacts on daily functioning | n = 100 (M 50, F 50) Ages 18–24 (23), 25–39 (26), 40–54 (25), 55+ (26) Community members living on Funafuti atoll, Tuvalu | Quantitative 76% reported worry about abstract climate stressors Of those with distress, 79% reported impairment in daily life and 28% reported extreme impairment Qualitative Worry about safety, lack of disaster preparedness, having nowhere to go Impact of worry on daily function: poor sleep due to climate change thoughts, not going out, disturbs leisure time | Sadness prominent: 79% for local aspects and 77% for abstract climate change Approx. 84% reported worry/anxiety in response to local climate change stressors, and 79% reported sadness about environmental impacts, loss of homes and decreasing capacity to grow crops Distress and anxiety related to local climate stressors were more common than to abstract climate change | Extremely vulnerable country which may become uninhabitable due to sea level rise Awareness of this reality is found throughout Tuvalu Poverty: those with more financial hardship reported greater distress Distress attributed to climate change (local and abstract) showed small–moderate correlations with psychological distress more broadly | B -No respondent validation -Little reflexivity -No clear methodology presented for qualitative analysis -Themes not explicitly presented -Questions were piloted locally, assessed for internal consistency |
Hoggett and Randall 2018 Country not reported | In-depth qualitative interviews Thematic analysis | To understand how scientists and activists psychologically manage their work on climate change To examine what emotional resilience factors are present | n = 16 (climate scientists 6, climate activists 10) Ages not well reported (activists 20 s–50 s, scientists 1 young, 5 senior) Gender not reported | Activists: ‘Crisis’ stage of journey involved urgency, terror, anger, feeling overwhelmed, disempowerment, difficult to resolve Anxiety from engagement with direct action (police, law) Burnout/depression in 9/10 activists Scientists: Anxiety from burden of responsibility Distress at disagreement with colleagues, public perception of science, fear of speaking out, media attacks | Activists’ trajectory: epiphany, immersion, crisis, resolution through sense of agency, action as antidote to despair Activists managing emotional impacts through positive and concrete view of the future, sophisticated and supportive network of practice, and emphasis on self-care Scientists’ trajectory: gradual realisation More variability in how knowledge affects private life Frustration/anger at public indifference Scientists managing emotional impacts through use of institutional defences: scientific progress, excitement of the work, detachment, rationality, specialisation, overwork | Both parties work directly with climate change issues in daily work Role (activist vs. scientist) demonstrated significant differences in trajectory of emotional impact, engagement in public sphere and managing emotional impacts | B -No funding source or consideration of ethics -Poor description of demographics of participants -Sampling bias -No data saturation -Data collection and recording unclear -Unclear how many people analysed the results -Quotes not matched to demographics -Limitations not discussed in detail -No reflexivity -Utilised member checking |
Howard et al 2020 USA | Mixed method: quantitative survey with single open-ended question on how climate change was contributing to levels of mental distress Quantitative analysis: descriptive and correlational statistics, ANOVA Qualitative analysis: content analysis with coding methodology | Primary: “to examine the association between climate change risk perception and mental well-being among farmers and ranchers in Montana” (p. 88) Secondary: “to examine how climate change may be affecting the mental well-being of farmers and ranchers in the state” (p. 88) | n = 125 Gender and race not recorded but were predominantly male and white Age 18–34 (21.7%), 35–54 (49.2%), 55+ (29.2%) Farmers and ranchers in Montana, USA | Financial concern: worry about reduced crop yields, no funds to mitigate impacts, land and investments rendered useless, no one to buy business, children will not take over Operational planning: worry about unpredictability of climate affecting planting, crop choice | Resilience: changing farming, action response, have to adapt, be creative, flexibility, support politicians/groups helping | Agricultural workers with livelihoods depending on land Affiliation: organic farmers had significantly greater anxiety compared to conventional Operation focus: fruit/ vegetable farmers had significantly greater anxiety than grain/legume farmers Contribution to income: those with farming contributing to 10–70% income had significantly greater anxiety compared to 70–100% No significant differences in anxiety by age, generation or years working in agriculture | A -Possible sampling bias -Quotes not matched to demographic data -Very small but targeted qualitative component -Survey pre-tested for validity -Qualitative coding by two separate authors with high Cohen’s kappa agreement score |
Kemkes and Akerman 2019 USA | Structured narrative interviews Interpretive phenomenological analysis | Explored participant understanding of climate change, worry about future changes, and who is responsible for addressing climate change | n = 17 (M 10, F 7) Ages 36–80 (mean age 56) Community members living on shore of Lake Superior, Wisconsin USA | Themes were not explicitly identified but extrapolated from data provided: Anxiety from failure of collective action and futility of individual change Uncertainty about local environmental changes, fear of major weather events Overwhelmed but acting ethically at an individual level “One-word responses” within the anxiety spectrum (scared, terrified, concerning, concerned) | Silence around climate change: inability to talk of climate change in certain settings Issue diluted amongst other things to be worried about Other one-word responses included negative (catastrophe, apocalyptic, hopeless/helpless, depressed), positive (hopeful, optimistic) words, as well as words related to scale of climate change (impending, inevitable, humbled) | Although demographic characteristics were gathered, they were not linked to themes derived from the data | C -Sample size and data saturation not addressed -Sampling bias -Themes not well elicited -No validation of findings -No discussion of limitations -No reflexivity, no consideration of ethics -Both authors performed data analysis independently |
Norgaard 2006 Norway | Ethnographic data (field research), interviews, media analysis, participant observation, focus groups Analytic method not documented | Aim not clearly expressed To explore why people were not more actively engaged with global warming, with a focus on emotion and emotion management | n = 46 (M 25, F 21) Ages <20 (7), 20–35 (8), 35–60 (19), 69+ (11) Total 45 Range “19 to early 70 s” Residents in a rural Norwegian community | Fear related to loss of ontological security Fear of “being a bad person”, which was a threat to individual and national self-concept Unpleasant emotions (including fear) managed through selective attention (controlling exposure to information, not thinking too far ahead, focusing on something individual can do) which led to “movement non-participation” | Helplessness Need to maintain optimism, stoicism Observed changes over a lifetime Guilt of contributing to the problem Guilt and threats to identity managed by perspectival selectivity | Salience and visibility of climate change due to local changes Norway is a wealthy nation which benefits from oil production Occupation: activists and educators limit access to information to avoid being overwhelmed and enable them to continue their work | D -Unclear aims and title -Sampling not described -No data saturation -Poor description of data recording -No qualitative analysis documented -No respondent validation or independent data analysis -No consideration of limitations -Limited reflexivity, significant subjectivity -No use of empirical data to support claims -Funding source unclear -Issues with sampling, analysis, reflexivity, and ethics threaten overall validity |
Nyantakyi-Frimpong and Bezner-Kerr 2015 Ghana | Ethnographic fieldwork guided by feminist political ecology theory Multimethod triangulation of focus groups, individual interviews, participant observation, meteorological data, household surveys Quantitative analysis: descriptive statistics (two sample test of proportions in SPSS version 21) Qualitative analysis: hand coding and analysis for themes; participatory ranking and scoring data analysed using a method by Tschakert to calculate incidence, severity and importance indices for each factor | “To explore the relative importance of climate change in the context of multiples stressors in semi-arid Ghana” (p. 1) “(i) What factors do farmers identify as most relevant for climate change resilience and adaptation, and how do these factors differ by gender, age and kinship relations? (ii) how important is climate change as compared to other factors that shape smallholder farming and food security?” (p. 40) | n = 135 8 Focus groups, n = 75 (young M 19, young F 21, elderly M 18, elderly F 17) In-depth interviews n = 60 (M 26, F 34) 6 were key informants (3 agricultural extension officers, 1 NGO worker, 1 nutritionist, and 1 health surveillance assistant). All were residents in 2 villages in northwest Ghana | Farmers are aware but do not worry about climate variability and change, compared to other concerns Farmers are used to extreme weather events and report that they already manage risk with adaptable farming systems and are used to innovating | Farmers perceive a change in climate accurately Concerns vary with gender - men worry about local weather events, food prices -women’s greatest concern is access to household granaries and labour constraints Land appropriation was a concern for all | Significant vulnerability (poverty, main economic activities are agriculture and pastoralism); 39% households are food insecure Respondents perceived themselves as less vulnerable to climate change because they already have adaptive capacity | A -No discussion of limitations, little reflexivity, ethics not acknowledged -Did not frame as climate change research to participants -Data saturation reached -Comprehensive methodology, data triangulation -Survey instrument was pre-tested -Findings were validated in feedback workshops |
Ojala 2012 Sweden | Questionnaire with open-ended and Likert-type questions Qualitative analysis: thematic analysis Quantitative analysis: descriptive statistics of coded statements | To explore how young Swedish people cope with worry and promote hope in relation to climate change | n = 348 (M 127, F 221) Young people in Sweden Intermediate level school children: mean age 11.7 (n = 90) Senior high school adolescents: mean age 16.4 (n = 146) Young adult university students: mean age 22.6 (n = 112) | Problem-focused coping -individual (preparatory actions, direct actions) -collective Emotion-focused coping -de-emphasising seriousness of the problem (threat is exaggerated/not real, ego-centric thinking, relativisation) -distancing (distraction, avoidance) -social support -hyperactivation Meaning-focused coping -positive reappraisal (historical perspective) -positive thinking/existential hope -trust (in science/technology, politics and policy, business, environment movement, humanity, religion) | Age—young people most likely to experience impacts Location—stable Western country Some perceived climate change as not affecting them | A -Sampling poorly described -Little reflexivity -No evidence of ethics approval -Findings not validated -Aims clearly stated and met, high utility of research -Good contextualisation of background and results -Good response rate, large sample size and age range | |
Petheram et al. 2010 Australia | Fieldwork visits Semi-structured interviews (individual and group), workshops (rich picture diagramming, participatory sculpting, participant-generated photography) Constructionist/grounded theory-based continuous data gathering and analysis, analysis of data with substantive and theoretical coding | To understand factors influencing general vulnerability and adaptive capacity in the context of poverty and climate change in Yolgnu people in NE Arnhem Land, Northern Territory | n = 21 (M 9, F 12) Range of older and younger adults (ages not specified) Community members in East Arnhem Land (male indigenous land/sea rangers and women from local households and a women’s organisation) | Climate change was less of a concern than other issues affecting the community Climate change will exacerbate existing concerns, cannot be considered in isolation from non-climate issues Raising awareness of climate change so school children do not worry | Participants were unclear about Western notions of climate change Differences in world view and miscommunication between participants and “Balanda” (white Australians) Preferences for adaptation strategies included sustainability and greater value on traditional and cultural practices Specific changes in landscape had been noted in recent years and caused distress -Taking care of country -Concern about current and future situation of communities and wanting change to relieve poverty and other worrying issues | Population highly vulnerable to climate change (poverty, lack of agency and adaptive capacity, historic events, multiple pressing biopsychosocial issues) Indigenous population with strong connection to place and sensitivity to the natural landscape | A -No funding source nominated -Adapted research aims based on findings to be of more utility/relevance -Data saturation reached -Participant verification occurred -Used culturally adapted methods to gather data -Good reflexivity |
Ryghaug et al. 2011 Norway | Focus group interviews Analysis ‘inspired’ by grounded theory; domestication theory used as a basis for making story lines | To analyse how people reason about and make sense of human-made global warming, in light of two previously identified categories of media representations, the “nature drama” and “science drama” | n = 62 in 10 focus groups (M 24, F 38) Age range 16–71 Community members in Norway Focus groups were existing social networks 26/62 (42%) were students | Climate change as a frightening scenario Worry for future generations was linked to extreme weather striking climate incidents (“nature drama”) Worry not pervasive, as frightening events are not happening here (their country) or now | Scientific controversy Role of the media as the main source of information about climate change, belief that media overemphasises threat Four ways of domesticating knowledge: acceptors, tempered acceptors, uncertain and sceptics | Participants from wealthy stable country Climate change perceived as distant from everyday concerns, less imminent than other problems | C -Bias in sampling -No comment on data saturation -No respondent validation -No discussion of limitations -No reflexivity, which is especially important given how subjects were recruited and inherent bias -Ethical flaws |
Wright and Nyberg 2012 Australia | Individual semi-structured interviews and analysis of documents (strategy docs, communication material, submissions to gov’t, media coverage) Abductive approach Coding of emotional expressions using QSR NVivo software | (i) To explore how organisations have responded to the evidenced emotionality of climate change in their corporate environmental practices (ii) To explore how sustainability specialists manage their own emotions in the process of emotionology work | n = 36 (M 21, F 15) Age range 25–60 Sustainability specialists in corporate industries in Australia | “Climate change as threat” (anxiety and apprehension in regard to the future implications for society and the economy) Anxiety was harnessed to improve employee engagement, productivity, and corporate reputation Sustainability managers/consultants downplay threat and promote challenge/opportunity linked to business concerns Managing emotions through calculative methods, constraining, championing and compartmentalising emotions | “Climate change as battleground or conflict” (frustration, anger, and hostility) and “climate change as challenge and opportunity” (hope, enthusiasm, and excitement) Themes regarding processes of emotionology work (spanning, changing, or creating emotionologies) | Sustainability specialists working directly with climate change issues, all believed in climate change and were passionate Age, type of organisation and gender were not discussed as qualifiers | C -Poor presentation of data findings -No reflexivity -No comment on data saturation -Unclear how data from documents were gathered and analysed -Sampling method not described -No validation of findings -No dissenting views -Ethical flaws |
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Soutar, C.; Wand, A.P.F. Understanding the Spectrum of Anxiety Responses to Climate Change: A Systematic Review of the Qualitative Literature. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2022, 19, 990. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19020990
Soutar C, Wand APF. Understanding the Spectrum of Anxiety Responses to Climate Change: A Systematic Review of the Qualitative Literature. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2022; 19(2):990. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19020990
Chicago/Turabian StyleSoutar, Catriona, and Anne P. F. Wand. 2022. "Understanding the Spectrum of Anxiety Responses to Climate Change: A Systematic Review of the Qualitative Literature" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 19, no. 2: 990. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19020990
APA StyleSoutar, C., & Wand, A. P. F. (2022). Understanding the Spectrum of Anxiety Responses to Climate Change: A Systematic Review of the Qualitative Literature. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 19(2), 990. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19020990