Skip to main content

Lund University Publications

LUND UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES

Climate Anxiety: Towards Understanding Its Structure and Correlates in a German-Speaking Quota Sample

Wullenkord, Marlis LU orcid ; Tröger, Josephine ; Hamann, Karen R S ; Loy, Laura S and Reese, Gerhard (2022) 17th European Congress of Psychology
Abstract
The climate crisis is an unprecedented existential threat that causes disturbing emotions, such as anxiety. However, relatively little is known about how people cope with climate anxiety, how it influences mental health and well-being, and whether it is relevant for climate (in)action. Recently, Clayton and Karazsia measured climate anxiety as a “clinically significant anxious response to climate change” (2020, p. 9) that may impair human well-being and functioning. To gain a more nuanced understanding of the phenomenon from an empirical psychological perspective, we translated the Climate Anxiety Scale into German and assessed potential correlates in a large German-speaking quota sample (N=1011, stratified by age and gender). Overall,... (More)
The climate crisis is an unprecedented existential threat that causes disturbing emotions, such as anxiety. However, relatively little is known about how people cope with climate anxiety, how it influences mental health and well-being, and whether it is relevant for climate (in)action. Recently, Clayton and Karazsia measured climate anxiety as a “clinically significant anxious response to climate change” (2020, p. 9) that may impair human well-being and functioning. To gain a more nuanced understanding of the phenomenon from an empirical psychological perspective, we translated the Climate Anxiety Scale into German and assessed potential correlates in a large German-speaking quota sample (N=1011, stratified by age and gender). Overall, people reported low levels of climate anxiety. Climate anxiety correlated positively with anxiety and depressiveness, avoidance of climate change in everyday life, and the frustration of basic psychological needs. It correlated negatively with climate-relevant self-protective strategies and denial. While unrelated to ideological beliefs, stronger climate anxiety was associated with pro-environmental intentions and support for climate policies. Nevertheless, we were not able to replicate the scale’s original factor structure. We thus encourage researchers to rework the scale and include an emotional factor in future research efforts. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
; ; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to conference
publication status
published
subject
keywords
climate anxiety, climate denial, basic psychological needs, well-being, policy support, pro-environmental behavioral intentions
conference name
17th European Congress of Psychology
conference location
Ljubljana, Slovenia
conference dates
2022-07-05 - 2022-07-08
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
f8474f7f-3c75-436e-91d6-895b222bc593
date added to LUP
2024-05-01 13:29:37
date last changed
2024-05-10 14:31:21
@misc{f8474f7f-3c75-436e-91d6-895b222bc593,
  abstract     = {{The climate crisis is an unprecedented existential threat that causes disturbing emotions, such as anxiety. However, relatively little is known about how people cope with climate anxiety, how it influences mental health and well-being, and whether it is relevant for climate (in)action. Recently, Clayton and Karazsia measured climate anxiety as a “clinically significant anxious response to climate change” (2020, p. 9) that may impair human well-being and functioning. To gain a more nuanced understanding of the phenomenon from an empirical psychological perspective, we translated the Climate Anxiety Scale into German and assessed potential correlates in a large German-speaking quota sample (N=1011, stratified by age and gender). Overall, people reported low levels of climate anxiety. Climate anxiety correlated positively with anxiety and depressiveness, avoidance of climate change in everyday life, and the frustration of basic psychological needs. It correlated negatively with climate-relevant self-protective strategies and denial. While unrelated to ideological beliefs, stronger climate anxiety was associated with pro-environmental intentions and support for climate policies. Nevertheless, we were not able to replicate the scale’s original factor structure. We thus encourage researchers to rework the scale and include an emotional factor in future research efforts.}},
  author       = {{Wullenkord, Marlis and Tröger, Josephine and Hamann, Karen R S and Loy, Laura S and Reese, Gerhard}},
  keywords     = {{climate anxiety; climate denial; basic psychological needs; well-being; policy support; pro-environmental behavioral intentions}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  title        = {{Climate Anxiety: Towards Understanding Its Structure and Correlates in a German-Speaking Quota Sample}},
  year         = {{2022}},
}