Buch, Englisch, 216 Seiten, Format (B × H): 163 mm x 237 mm, Gewicht: 426 g
Psychological Perspectives on Resilience and Interconnectedness
Buch, Englisch, 216 Seiten, Format (B × H): 163 mm x 237 mm, Gewicht: 426 g
ISBN: 978-0-19-762267-4
Verlag: Oxford University Press
As environmental destruction becomes more extreme around the planet, the way humans experience the natural world is changing, giving rise to more frequent and intense experiences of eco-anxiety. Not simply personal or social, eco-anxiety is distributed across the relationships that humans have with the life, land, air, and water of Earth. This anthology presents international and interdisciplinary perspectives on eco-anxiety, with attention to two of the most prominent sources of eco-anxiety today: pandemics, specifically with regards to COVID-19, and the climate crisis. From the microscopic scale of viruses to the macroscopic scale of Earth's atmosphere, instability in natural systems is causing unprecedented forms of psychological distress, including anxiety and related emotional or affective states like grief, anger, guilt, and depression.
Eco-Anxiety and Pandemic Distress both builds upon and moves beyond the latest research in environmental psychology, conservation psychology, and clinical psychology. Dominant research paradigms in these areas rely primarily on experimental and observational methodologies that analyze quantitative data. In contrast, this book focuses on sophisticated traditions of social and cultural psychology in dialogue with other disciplines in the social sciences and humanities. The result is a nuanced understanding of the human experience of confronting eco-anxiety, offering critical insights into the subjective worlds of individuals as they grapple with the intertwined existential threats of the climate crisis and pandemics.
Fachgebiete
Weitere Infos & Material
- Introduction: Eco-Anxiety, Climate Change, and the Coronavirus
- Panu Pihkala
- Part 1. Cultivating Connection and Resilience
- Chapter 1. Cultivating Belonging: Healing Defensive Anxiety in Times of Collective Trauma
- Jan Edl Stein
- Chapter 2. From Eco-Anxiety to Eco-Resilience: Toward a Psychology of Care
- Linda Buzzell and Craig Chalquist
- Chapter 3. Walking, Wilderness, and Exposure: Learning from Thoreau's Episode on Katahdin
- Christopher C. Kirby
- Chapter 4. Self-Quarantine: Deepening Natural Encounter During COVID-19
- Elektra Mercutio
- Chapter 5. Setting Up for Practice with Eco-Conscious Clients
- Jamie Keaton Jones
- Part 2. Sociology and Cultural Psychology
- Chapter 6. Eco-Anxiety as a Global Affect
- Jaouad Achtitah and Said Mentak
- Chapter 7. Eco-Anxiety in a Risk Society: A Sociological Perspective
- Leonard A. Steverson
- Chapter 8. The Complex Role of Anxiety in Public Engagement: Lessons from the COVID-19 Crisis for Climate Communications
- Rhéa Rocque, Laura Cameron, and Ian Mauro
- Chapter 9. Behavior Change During COVID-19: A Matter of Life and Death?
- Filia Garivaldis and Muhammad Iqbal
- Part 3. Diverse Global Responses
- Chapter 10. The House of Man: Sheltering in the Anthropocene
- Susan Haris and Bharati Puri
- Chapter 11. Adapting to Eco-Anxiety: Experiences from Zambia
- Fred Moonga
- Chapter 12. Psychiatric Ward Lockdown in Latin America: Experiences from the Coronavirus Pandemic
- Juan Evangelista Tercero Gaitán Buitrago
- Chapter 13. Telepsychology as the Primary Mental Health Care Response to the COVID-19 Pandemic in the Philippines
- Emmanuel Villoria Hernani
- Chapter 14. Sounding the Environmental Benefits of the COVID-19 Pandemic in Southern Nigeria
- Olusegun Stephen Titus




