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Contents
- Abstract
- Potential Mediators and Moderators of Climate Change Impacts
- Media Representations and Information Technologies
- Vulnerability and Resilience
- Social and Cognitive Factors
- Climate Change as a Natural and Technological Disaster
- Direct Psychological Impacts of Global Climate Change
- Environmental Distress and Place Attachment
- Indirect Impacts of Global Climate Change
- The Range of Emotions Associated With Climate Change
- Anxiety and Worry Regarding Climate Change
- Depressive Emotions: Guilt, Despair, and Grief
- Denial as Social Justification and Psychological Defense
- Apathy Regarding Climate Change
- Social and Community Impacts of Climate Change
- Heat and Violence
- Climate Change and Intergroup Conflict
- Displacement and Relocation
- Reactions to Socioeconomic Disparities
- Decreased Access to Thriving Ecosystems
- Social Justice Implications of Climate Change Impacts
- Coping With Climate Change Impacts
- Therapeutic Considerations
- Creativity and Empowerment
- Conclusion
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Abstract
An appreciation of the psychological impacts of global climate change entails recognizing the complexity and multiple meanings associated with climate change; situating impacts within other social, technological, and ecological transitions; and recognizing mediators and moderators of impacts. This article describes three classes of psychological impacts: direct (e.g., acute or traumatic effects of extreme weather events and a changed environment); indirect (e.g., threats to emotional well-being based on observation of impacts and concern or uncertainty about future risks); and psychosocial (e.g., chronic social and community effects of heat, drought, migrations, and climate-related conflicts, and postdisaster adjustment). Responses include providing psychological interventions in the wake of acute impacts and reducing the vulnerabilities contributing to their severity; promoting emotional resiliency and empowerment in the context of indirect impacts; and acting at systems and policy levels to address broad psychosocial impacts. The challenge of climate change calls for increased ecological literacy, a widened ethical responsibility, investigations into a range of psychological and social adaptations, and an allocation of resources and training to improve psychologists' competency in addressing climate change–related impacts.
The full story of climate change is the unfolding story of an idea and how this idea is changing the way we think, feel, and act. (Hulme, 2009, p. xxviii)
Global climate change is likely to have significant negative effects on mental health and well-being, effects that will be felt most by vulnerable populations and those with preexisting serious mental illness...





