Rethinking climate change vulnerabilities after COVID‐19: Recommendations for social science‐based interventions drawn from research on Conspiracy Theories and Diversity Science

IF 1.8 4区 社会学 Q3 PSYCHOLOGY, SOCIAL
Aurélien Graton, Oriane Sarrasin, Olivier Klein, Jonathon P. Schuldt
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Abstract

Scholars have noted several connections between the COVID‐19 pandemic and the climate crisis, ranging from the material influence of the pandemic on climate change processes (e.g., how lockdowns temporarily lowered climate emissions) to the similar ways the crises have been managed. Both crises are also global in scope, have exerted a significant toll on human lives and require major changes in our lifestyles. However, while collective responses to COVID‐19 were rapid and concerted, efforts to address climate change continue to be met with resistance. In this article, we investigate the social vulnerabilities common to both crises and the lessons that policymakers in the climate field can take away from the pandemic. After outlining the theoretical and empirical similarities between the two crises, we present a general framework and recommendations for the use of social science‐based interventions. We focus on two broad topics of contemporary interest that lay bare social vulnerabilities of the coronavirus pandemic—conspiracy theories and racial and ethnic inequities—to highlight the ways that understanding social and psychological processes associated with the pandemic can help inform more efficient climate policies.Public Significance StatementThis paper shows how the COVID‐19 pandemic's social and psychological lessons can guide climate change policies. By leveraging social science insights, we propose strategies and illustrations to combat misinformation and address social inequities, ultimately fostering more effective and inclusive climate actions and benefiting policymakers and society at large.
在 COVID-19 之后反思气候变化的脆弱性:从阴谋论和多样性科学研究中得出的基于社会科学的干预建议
学者们注意到 COVID-19 大流行病与气候危机之间的一些联系,从大流行病对气候变化过程的实质性影响(例如,封锁如何暂时降低了气候排放)到管理危机的相似方式。这两场危机也都是全球性的,对人类生命造成了重大损失,并要求我们对生活方式做出重大改变。然而,虽然对 COVID-19 的集体反应是迅速而一致的,但应对气候变化的努力仍然受到抵制。在本文中,我们将探讨这两次危机中共同的社会脆弱性,以及气候领域的决策者可以从大流行病中吸取的经验教训。在概述了这两次危机在理论和实证方面的相似之处之后,我们提出了一个总体框架,并就如何使用基于社会科学的干预措施提出了建议。我们将重点放在两个当代人感兴趣的广泛话题上,这两个话题暴露了冠状病毒大流行的社会脆弱性--阴谋论以及种族和民族不平等,从而强调了解与大流行相关的社会和心理过程有助于为更有效的气候政策提供信息。通过利用社会科学的洞察力,我们提出了应对错误信息和解决社会不平等问题的策略和图解,最终促进更有效和更具包容性的气候行动,并使政策制定者和整个社会受益。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.80
自引率
6.70%
发文量
42
期刊介绍: Recent articles in ASAP have examined social psychological methods in the study of economic and social justice including ageism, heterosexism, racism, sexism, status quo bias and other forms of discrimination, social problems such as climate change, extremism, homelessness, inter-group conflict, natural disasters, poverty, and terrorism, and social ideals such as democracy, empowerment, equality, health, and trust.
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