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Challenging the Idea That Humans Are Not Designed to Solve Climate Change.

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dc.contributor.author D. Atkinson, Quentin
dc.contributor.author Jacquet, Jennifer
dc.date.accessioned 2021-12-07T21:59:05Z
dc.date.available 2021-12-07T21:59:05Z
dc.date.issued 2021
dc.identifier.citation DOI: 10.1177/17456916211018454 www.psychologicalscience.org/PPS en_US
dc.identifier.uri ${sadil.baseUrl}/handle/123456789/1492
dc.description 13 pages : PDF en_US
dc.description.abstract In the face of a slow and inadequate global response to anthropogenic climate change, scholars and journalists frequently claim that human psychology is not designed or evolved to solve the problem, and they highlight a range of “psychological barriers” to climate action. Here, we critically examine this claim and the evidence on which it is based. We identify four key problems with attributing climate inaction to “human nature” or evolved psychological barriers: (a) It minimizes variability within and between populations; (b) it oversimplifies psychological research and its implications for policy; (c) it frames responsibility for climate change in terms of the individual at the expense of the role of other aspects of culture, including institutional actors; and (d) it rationalizes inaction. For these reasons, the message from social scientists must be clear—humans’ current collective failure to tackle climate change on the scale required cannot be explained as a product of a universal and fixed human nature because it is a fundamentally cultural phenomenon, reflecting culturally evolved values, norms, institutions, and technologies that can and must change rapidly. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher Association for Phychological Science en_US
dc.subject climate change, essentialism, evolution, hardwired, psychology en_US
dc.title Challenging the Idea That Humans Are Not Designed to Solve Climate Change. en_US
dc.type Article en_US


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