
The responsibility of communicating difficult truths about climate influenced societal disruption and collapse
Author(s) -
Jasmine Kieft
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
ata
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2253-5853
pISSN - 2253-5845
DOI - 10.9791/ajpanz.2021.06
Subject(s) - anticipation (artificial intelligence) , futures contract , vulnerability (computing) , feeling , perception , psychology , coping (psychology) , social psychology , climate change , environmental ethics , psychotherapist , economics , computer security , ecology , philosophy , artificial intelligence , neuroscience , computer science , biology , financial economics
This paper presents a review of psychology research that can help people begin to assess the different ways they can responsibly support each other to talk about their thoughts and feelings on their perceptions of societal disruption and collapse, at home and abroad, due to environmental and climate change. It includes a summary of a review of published studies in psychology on matters of anticipating difficult futures, including vulnerability, disruption, disaster, suffering and mortality. The claims by both specialists and non- specialists that collapse anticipation is necessarily harmful to mental health and social engagement is shown to be theoretically and empirically weak. Instead, the research suggests we engage each other on this upsetting topic to promote coping. It highlights the potential for that engagement to support people with processing difficult emotions and thus finding more pro-social and pro-environmental ways of responding to societal disturbances.