4.7 Article

Natural cycles in lay understandings of climate change

Journal

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2013.07.002

Keywords

Australia; Climate sceptics; Uncertainty; Public attitudes; Weather; Longitudinal study

Funding

  1. Australian Research Council [DP0878089]
  2. Australian Research Council [DP0878089] Funding Source: Australian Research Council

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This article analyses lay understandings of climate change elicited through a longitudinal population-based survey of climate change, place and community among 1162 residents in the Hunter Valley, Southeast Australia. We explore how older residents in contrasting rural and coastal geographic areas perceive climate change information in terms of culturally relevant meanings and values, lived experiences and emotional responses to seasonal cycles, temperature fluctuations and altered landscapes. Thematic analysis of comments given by 467 interviewees to an open-ended question identified a significant subset for whom the concepts of nature and science express competing views about changing climatic conditions. For them, the idea of natural cycles is a significant cultural construct that links nature and humans through time in a way that structures stable and resilient understandings of environmental change, drawing on established cosmological frameworks for contemplating the future in relation to the past. In contrast to other studies that postulate scepticism and denial as individuals' fear management strategies in the face of climate change threat, we found that the natural cycles view is founded on a reassuring deeper conviction about how nature works, and is linked to other pro-environmental values not commonly found in sceptical groups. It is a paradox of natural cycles thinking that it rejects the anthropocentrism that is at the heart of science-based environmentalism. By contrast, it places humans as deeply integrated with nature, rather than operating outside it and attempting with uncertain science to control something that is ultimately uncontrollable. (C) 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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