Feeling anxious and being engaged in a warming world: climate anxiety and adolescents' pro‐environmental behavior

Author:

Becht Andrik1,Spitzer Jenna2,Grapsas Stathis2,van de Wetering Judith2,Poorthuis Astrid2,Smeekes Anouk3,Thomaes Sander2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Education and Pedagogy Utrecht University Utrecht The Netherlands

2. Department of Psychology Utrecht University Utrecht The Netherlands

3. Interdisciplinary Social Science Utrecht University Utrecht The Netherlands

Abstract

BackgroundClimate anxiety is increasingly prevalent among adolescents worldwide. Are climate‐anxious adolescents prone to engage in pro‐environmental behavior? Or might the association between climate anxiety and pro‐environmental be curvilinear, such that high levels of climate anxiety become ‘paralyzing’? And do these associations depend on whether adolescents believe that, with effort, the worst impacts of climate change can still be prevented?MethodsWe addressed these questions in three studies (two preregistered; combined N = 2,211), conducted across two countries. We used cross‐sectional and longitudinal methods, and various measures of climate anxiety and pro‐environmental behavior. We performed Bayesian regression analyses comparing two models that tested competing hypotheses. The first model included a linear effect of climate anxiety on pro‐environmental behavior, and the second model included both a linear and a curvilinear (i.e. inverted U‐shaped) effect of climate anxiety on pro‐environmental behavior. Next, we added environmental efficacy to the best fitting model and explored its moderating effects.ResultsAdolescents reported low‐to‐moderate levels of climate anxiety. Across the board, we found evidence for a small, positive, and mostly linear (rather than curvilinear) association between climate anxiety and pro‐environmental behavior. While Study 1 supported a curvilinear association (Bayes Factor (BF) = 18.87), Studies 2 and 3 mostly supported a linear model (BFs range 6.86–12.71), except for weak support (BF = 1.62) for a curvilinear association between climate anxiety symptoms and public sphere pro‐environmental behavior. Adolescents' environmental efficacy moderated this link for public sphere (e.g. activism), but not private sphere (e.g. recycling), pro‐environmental behavior.ConclusionsClimate‐anxious adolescents are prone to engage in pro‐environmental behavior. We found limited evidence for ‘eco‐paralysis’ (i.e. a passive state of pro‐environmental behavioral stasis) at high levels of climate anxiety. Our results are consistent with the possibility that supporting adolescents' environmental efficacy will help climate‐anxious adolescents engage in public sphere pro‐environmental behavior.

Funder

HORIZON EUROPE European Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

Reference46 articles.

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2. American Psychological Association. (2020).Majority of US adults believe climate change is most important issue today. Available from:https://www.apa.org;https://www.apa.org/news/press/releases/2020/02/climate‐change[last accessed 19 May 2023].

3. Addressing climate anxiety among young people in the Philippines

4. Eco‐anxiety in youth: An integrative literature review

5. Climate anxiety: Psychological responses to climate change

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