Anticipatory solastalgia in the Antipodes: Evidence of future-oriented distress about environmental change in Australia and New Zealand

Samantha K. Stanley , Omid Ghasemi , Robert M. Ross , John R. Kerr , Mathew D. Marques , Niels G. Mede , Sebastian Berger , Mark Alfano , Neil Levy , Marinus Ferreira , Viktoria Cologna
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Abstract

Introduction

Lived experience of negative environmental change can evoke distress called ‘solastalgia’. Worldwide, people are reporting emotional challenges relating to awareness of current and continued environmental decline, even without a direct experience of climate change. Our research examines the measurement of anticipatory solastalgia: the experience of present distress about expected environmental change.

Methods

Our preregistered research uses survey samples from Australia (n = 1450) and New Zealand (n = 1022) to validate a recently developed five-item Anticipatory Solastalgia Scale (the ANSOS). We also measured participants’ experiences of climate emotions, expectations of the increased severity of climate-related weather disasters, and support for climate policy.

Results

The ANSOS fits the data well, is invariant across these two countries, and shows good internal consistency. Supporting convergent validity, the more that participants reported experiencing anticipatory solastalgia, the more intensely they reported feeling negative emotions about climate change. ANSOS scores were higher among those who expected more severe future impacts from climate-related weather disasters, and positively related to support for policies that aim to address climate change.

Conclusion

The study adds further evidence for the validity of the anticipatory solastalgia scale; a measure that is designed to facilitate understanding of people's distress responses to the expectations of, and emotional engagement with, environmental threats as the climate changes.
澳大利亚和新西兰的环境变化带来的未来导向的苦恼的证据
负面环境变化的生活经历会引起被称为“太阳痛”的痛苦。在世界范围内,即使没有直接经历过气候变化,人们也在报告与意识到当前和持续的环境退化有关的情感挑战。我们的研究检验了预期性太阳痛的测量:对预期环境变化的当前痛苦的体验。方法采用澳大利亚(n = 1450)和新西兰(n = 1022)的调查样本进行预注册研究,验证最近开发的五项预见性Solastalgia量表(ANSOS)。我们还测量了参与者对气候情绪的体验、对气候相关天气灾害日益严重的预期以及对气候政策的支持。结果ANSOS数据拟合良好,在两国间具有不变性,且具有良好的内部一致性。为了支持趋同效度,参与者报告的预期性太阳痛越多,他们报告的对气候变化的负面情绪就越强烈。在那些预计未来与气候有关的天气灾害会造成更严重影响的人群中,ANSOS得分较高,并且与支持旨在应对气候变化的政策呈正相关。结论:本研究进一步证明了预见性太阳骨痛量表的有效性;一种旨在促进理解人们对气候变化等环境威胁的预期和情感参与的痛苦反应的措施。
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来源期刊
The journal of climate change and health
The journal of climate change and health Global and Planetary Change, Public Health and Health Policy
CiteScore
4.80
自引率
0.00%
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0
审稿时长
68 days
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