Chargement Évènements

Séminaire interdisciplinaire GPR HOPE & BSE

 

Piero Basaglia 

Programme :
11h: 2 présentations
12h: discussion générale (aspects méthodologiques, étude des comportements environnementaux, benchmarking, etc)
12h30 : déjeuner

 

Addressing climate change with behavioral science: A global intervention tournament in 63 countries

– published as: Vlasceanu et al (2024), Science Advances, 10(6) –


Effectively reducing climate change requires marked, global behavior change. However, it is unclear which strategies are most likely to motivate people to change their climate beliefs and behaviors. Here, we tested 11 expert-crowdsourced interventions on four climate mitigation outcomes: beliefs, policy support, information sharing intention, and an effortful tree-planting behavioral task. Across 59,440 participants from 63 countries, the interventions’ effectiveness was small, largely limited to nonclimate skeptics, and differed across outcomes: Beliefs were strengthened mostly by decreasing psychological distance (by 2.3%), policy support by writing a letter to a future-generation member (2.6%), information sharing by negative emotion induction (12.1%), and no intervention increased the more effortful behavior-several interventions even reduced tree planting. Last, the effects of each intervention differed depending on people’s initial climate beliefs. These findings suggest that the impact of behavioral climate interventions varies across audiences and target behaviors

 

The role of health co-benefits in climate policy support

[ongoing]

This paper investigates whether communicating that carbon pricing not only addresses long-term climate risks but also delivers immediate local public health benefits by reducing toxic air pollutants affects public support for climate policy. In a controlled experimental setting, we explore how emphasizing the dual benefits of decarbonization policies—both reducing greenhouse gas emissions and curbing harmful pollutants like PM and NOx, which are major contributors to global morbidity and mortality—affects participants’ willingness to support climate policies.

 

 

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