“Taking Action in Community Is Much, Much Preferable to Doing It Alone”: An Examination of Multi-Level Facilitators of and Barriers to Sustained Collective Climate Change Activism Among US Residents
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results
3.1. Barriers to Sustained Climate Change Activism
3.1.1. Not Knowing What Action to Take
I don’t think that it’s a lack of information about what’s happening. I think it’s a lack of information about how you can get involved and how simple it can be. So these hours of action are a really great example. It’s like, you dedicate one hour a week for just three weeks out of the month. So it’s the three hours a month that you’re dedicating to climate change, that is making an impact, and it’s easy and it’s accessible. I think that is really a key thing to get more people engaged.(Non-binary, age 28)
So even if you don’t know anything about climate action, they guide you through it. Like, it’s very easy to explain what and I think a lot of the other organizations, it’s more about here’s who we are here, it’s kind of more watered down and confusing. Okay, what do you actually do? Whereas [CMA takes] guided action, they provide playbooks, it’s just different than what I have seen in any other of the groups that I was researching.(Female, age 33)
I think they’re called calls to action, where they will send a text message. Sometimes I get these very rarely, but I really like them when I do. It says, “Hey, this is coming up.” We make a phone call regarding whatever topic to this person, or your city council person When the request is very specific, and says contact your city person about this topic, please do it by Friday. Those I find are really helpful. Because, when you’re acting alone, what I can struggle with is picking a direction to follow.(Male, age 32)
3.1.2. Skills Required/Technical Capacity
I’m worried they’ll ask me a question about a topic, and I won’t feel quite as informed on it as I would like to, so that I’ll feel flustered about answering, and so that’s kind of what leads me to not doing the phone calls is what if I what if I get a follow-up question…(Female, age 29)
I think I’m learning that I need to learn like new skills, which is like you know, to write a convincing argument, I think it’s a skill to write to like a senator in a way that sounds both like personal, but well-informed, but you know, like I think like it’s, it’s not a type of writing that I like do outside of this work, so I feel like I’m working on that, and then writing like op-eds or letters to the editor also feels like an area that is challenging for me, but luckily with this group, I don’t feel like I need to be personally an expert in any of these policies or any of the science because they lay out briefs and things like that for me, so for me, the challenges are all just kind of the writing challenges.(Male, age 31)
I think that one of the reasons that, other people in my age range don’t love it the same way that I do is, that it is pretty technologically intensive for people that aren’t used to having three screens up.(Female, age 73)
3.1.3. Emotional Capacity, Overwhelmed, and Burnout
…[T]here’s mental health issues. People have with their kids or their life and they have the time, but they’re like, I can’t handle any more stress.(Female, age 57)
With a full-time job and with a life outside of that, it’s really easy to get burnt out and then feel guilty for not taking as much action.(Non-binary, age 28)
I don’t want to show up to something that’s going to leave me feeling drained and scared and hopeless, right? Because that is not a place from which I can act effectively. So that’s a big one, and I think that kept me away from climate action for a long time actually, because I assumed that all spaces were like that.(Male, age 27)
3.1.4. Lack of Time
I suppose career and family responsibilities are kind of what hold me back from being more involved. I mean those prior responsibilities do in my hierarchy of necessity, being able to have happy and healthy kiddos and a happy and healthy wife, and a career that lets me afford living at least the way I want to. Those do seem to come first, but I have found that I will compromise on career time specifically to engage more with climate activism. So if there’s a thing over at three o’clock at a city hall meeting, I’m going to disengage from work, attend this meeting and be really present with it and then go back to work later. I’ve taken my family to exactly one climate change meeting and it went fine. But I don’t think it’s the sort of thing I’m going to do again. Because as a parent, parenting mode and, being productive, those are two very different things. I can find I can do one or I can do the other, but I can’t do both at once.(Male, age 32)
At the beginning of the year, I set myself a goal to live my values more consistently. I feel like I have a set of values and I wanted to be acting on them more consistently and I set aside a certain number of hours per week for climate activism of different sorts. And just climate focused efforts outside of my day job, because like I said, I in my heart of hearts believe that the ideal activist is consistently engaged in climate activism in the ways that we described. But, what has felt difficult, especially the last couple of months as relationships in my life, just like basically as the things in my everyday life that I’m committed to have taken up more time and given me less flexibility and had me in transit, a lot has just been finding slash choosing to make the time to engage. That has been my biggest blocker in the last couple of months. For example, I really, as you can probably tell really support what [CMA] is doing. I’ve been trying to bring them to my team, et cetera. But the Thursday [CMA activism hour], that I was going to most often, I haven’t been able to make it to a number of weeks just because that hour on Thursdays, there’s been other things that pushed me and then I don’t do a good job of doing the action independently another time or signing up for a different [CMA activism hour]. So, time has felt hard. Finding the time, the energy during that time has been probably my biggest blocker.(Male, age 27)
3.1.5. Political Activism Is Not the Norm
I would say is that in general, even people who might vote like me and have similar beliefs to mine, don’t feel compelled to political activism and I was raised in a family where that was pretty much, we did it, even as a child.(Female, age 73)
I’ve been trying to bring friends into this, and I find people are pretty like disengaged, so I think like people close to me not being more involved in this kind of activism probably keeps it from feeling like a more organic part of my life, and I think at times just the feeling of pessimism can, can make it something I, a topic I don’t want to engage in more than this, this once a week kind of way.(Male, age 31)
3.2. Facilitators of Sustained Climate Change Activism
3.2.1. Values, Personal Norms, and Identity Alignment
It was the feeling of my commitment to climate activism and my commitment to my values and not just holding them in principle, but acting them out in practice. That is rising above the noise and rising above the, not the noise. That is rising above the cycles and day-to-day ups and downs and feelings and commitments of my life and is taking the place that it, it should be, it was the feeling of my, the ways that I allocate my time and energy are aligned with how I believe that I should be and that felt really good.(Male, age 27)
My family and friends, I’m the weird one in the family, and I get gentle teasing. But overall, they’re very proud of me. Which is really helpful. Because it’s hard being the weird one. It’s nice that I have a supportive family who, I have a hard time activating them. But they’re very kind and sweet and supportive of the work I’m doing, and if I can give them a, hey, sign this petition, sign this, call your rep about this thing, or do that, one of those email forms. Tell them that you care about this. They’ll do that. It’s just more continuous engagement they really struggle with. But it is helpful. It’s hard being the weird one out, you know. To have a circle where at least no one’s mean to you about it is helpful.(Female, age 29)
3.2.2. Habit and Routine
I am a very like kind of goals and habits oriented person. I very much believe in the power of habit and that we are the sum of our habits, so I would say my belief and my desire to really form a climate activism habit, despite some of the obstacles I’ve been dealing with to doing that is something I can fall back on.(Male, age 27)
I get into a routine. So if there’s something that’s not happening on my usual day, which is Thursday I just won’t do it. Even though they do all these cool kickoff parties on Mondays for instance and it’s not Thursday. Thursday’s my day.(Female, age 29)
3.2.3. Establishment of Community
A bunch of other people are doing this alongside me and even if I’m not in the best of moods other people will be super jazzed about it and that kind of optimism and good vibes, a little infectious sometimes.(Female, 31)
I think the impact is a big part, is a part of it, but there’s, I think, also, it’s the community element, right? It’s I’m not doing it by myself, because it’s not something that you can solve by yourself, obviously, because it spans the whole world. So that’s having other folks around is an important part of that, too.(Male, age 27)
My ideal way to engage in them would be to join the Zoom calls and to do it with other people in my community close friends, family, partners around me joining with me. I definitely believe that taking action in community is much, much preferable to doing it alone. I think I prefer that so much so that when I’m not able to make it to the [CMA activism hour] I’ve had a hard time motivating myself to take the action myself.(Male, age 27)
Once I understood what was happening I felt either I was suffering alone or I was the only one that cared or the only one that knew. This information’s been out there, why isn’t everyone terrified about this? This should be the biggest emergency ever, and people are going about the day, and so it felt isolating. So getting to see the whole group on Zoom or on Slack or whatever, it kind of pulled me out of that loneliness and isolation. Why isn’t everybody else freaking out about this?(Male, age 33)
It’s nice to just meet people who are thinking about the same thing. I think with climate, it’s so important to meet like-minded people because it just keeps you from being siloed and stressed out all by yourself.(Female, age 29)
3.2.4. Action Is Personal/Local
I find that going much smaller and much more local, you can get a lot better feedback from the people you’re writing to and that feedback, it’s basically sort of a positive reinforcement about, Oh, somebody did read this and, they may not be fully on board with what I’m trying to do, but they are at least listening and have their ears open…(Male, age 32)
It does feel super cool to get a response from my mayor. That’s like not a generic response, it’s like, oh wow I didn’t hear, know about this, I’ll contact the school districts. I do feel like local activism does feel more effective.(Male, age 31)
3.3. Both Barriers to and Facilitators of Sustained Climate Change Activism
3.3.1. Climate Anxiety/Distress
Because I think anyone who does any climate work kind of goes through this cycle of fear, denial panic, acceptance and when it comes to climate change and what it’s– like, how catastrophic it can be and I think a lot of people get in the camp of paralysis, and they know it’s a problem, and they don’t know what to do about it, and so they ignore it and then, eventually, hopefully, they make it into action, because that’s kind of the only thing you can do in the face of all of those feelings is take an action, to be effective at addressing it. So, yeah, so for me I don’t know. Climate change is something I’m constantly thinking about if I weren’t doing something about it through my job and my extracurricular activities, then I would just sit there and be anxious about it and I think the action definitely leads me to be still anxious, but less anxious, because if you’re doing something about it, that’s all you can do.(Female, age 29)
We’re so lucky. We have this great planet that supports life so well, and we’re so perfectly adapted to it, and it’s just going to be a string of really bad days when we can’t go outside anymore. But really the great thing about [CMA] and I’m sure you’re highlighting this in your work, is how when you engage in that activism, you spend a lot less time dwelling on the negative. You feel a lot more positive. That’s my experience, at least.(Female, age 43)
I think climate is such a humongous thing, both in terms of chronological scale, geographic scale, but also its reaching implications throughout our world. So even though the impact, yes, we all understand, suddenly we have hurricanes in California due to anthropogenic climate change. Like we have insane wildfires and droughts and all these flip-floppings of rainy versus dry seasons… I think feeling that these forces are so much bigger than you and that I can’t just call the president and be, hey, do me a solid and to declare a climate emergency, but have to be at the whim of all of these forces, is incredibly, it’s an absolutely debilitating feeling sometimes. It’s all these factors that kind of bury you at times and so it’s hard to work past that to feel like, oh, if I write this letter to the editor, everything’s going to be okay.(Female, age 31)
3.3.2. Modality of Activism
It felt hard to find a group that I truly aligned with that weren’t either focusing on actions that I didn’t feel were enough, or they were a little too unwilling to create a wide coalition.(Male, age 31)
There are some of the other organizations they have face to face meetings, not as easy for me.(Female, age 73)
I feel very anxious kind of doing those, those phone banks, because you are calling people. It’s really valuable, right? And it moves the needle in terms of who gets elected and what policies move forward. I just feel more anxious about being on the phone with people and sometimes they’re, they really don’t want to talk to you. Though sometimes it’s really nice, you meet someone who’s like, yeah, I’m definitely going to vote and I care a lot about climate change. But I think it feels a lot more low key, a lot easier to do the [CMA activism hour] where we’re meeting up together, but I’m just kind of quietly working in a Google doc on my own thing and it feels, it’s just it’s just kind of easier.(Male, age 31)
3.3.3. Impact
I don’t feel like marching on something or protesting in front of a bank building is that effective, and so I think the biggest thing is wondering about the effectiveness of the thing that you’re doing.(Female, age 29)
The other groups seem more like come to a meeting, let’s talk about it. Let’s maybe do something once in a while. It’s like a couple of the groups, I mean, I’m on every online group imaginable, but some of them are just sign a petition. I don’t think that that has an impact, and so while I do occasionally sign a petition that seems particularly important, that doesn’t feel impactful to me.(Female, age 73)
I think prior to recently, I would say that there’s kind of that demoralizing aspect of sending things into the abyss is definitely a big part of it and I think that’s just the way general activism works in general when you’re reaching out to your local leaders, there’s only a chance, a small chance that they’re actually going to respond and not just check a box that, you know, another email came in on that topic.(Male, age 31)
3.3.4. Social Network Support
So I think that they—I have the feeling of, I want to feel like their belief in me, their belief that I am an engaged person on the issue of climate change is true and not unfounded. In order to live up to their perception of me and who I want to be both to myself and in their eyes, I need to not just do climate work from nine to five and then tune out.(Male, age 27)
I mean, I think I’ve surrounded—even outside of [CMA], I’ve surrounded myself with like-minded individuals in my social groups… just speaking about climate change is really beneficial generally and it’s a topic that I do get to talk about with people in my life all the time, because we see eye to eye on it.(Male, age 31)
But it’s also helpful to feel recognized. So I have a lot of friends who will give me props or like say kind things to me about my activism and even though I don’t see them taking the same actions that I do, the fact that, oh, people see this and appreciate this and agree with what I’m doing and agree that it is a good and important thing. It’s helpful. I know it’s kind of small and maybe petty, but it definitely can help you sometimes when you’re feeling in the thick of it and somebody sends you a really sweet message saying that they appreciate all you do. They’re proud of you, whatever.(Female, age 31)
3.3.5. Geographic Location
If I felt as though the people, if the governor were pro-environment, I would feel less inclined to send him a letter or to send him an email, any kind of communication, because I would feel he’s already on my team. But because he’s not on my team, I do feel more obligated to complain to him.(Male, age 32)
I do also think just living in a city like New York City really helps with this. I mean, one, you have groups like [CMA] around that you can have local meetups because there’s enough of a population that’s interested.(Male, age 31)
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Barriers to sustained climate change activism | |
1 | Not knowing what action to take |
2 | Skills required/technical capacity |
3 | Emotional capacity, overwhelmed, and burnout |
4 | Lack of time |
5 | Political activism is not the norm |
Facilitators of sustained climate change activism | |
1 | Values, personal norms, and identity alignment |
2 | Habit and routine |
3 | Establishment of community |
4 | Action is personal/local |
Both barriers to and facilitators of sustained climate change activism | |
1 | Climate anxiety/distress |
2 | Modality of activism |
3 | Impact |
4 | Social network support |
5 | Geographic location |
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Dayton, L.; Parker, K.; Ross, J.; Tharmarajah, S.; Latkin, C. “Taking Action in Community Is Much, Much Preferable to Doing It Alone”: An Examination of Multi-Level Facilitators of and Barriers to Sustained Collective Climate Change Activism Among US Residents. Climate 2024, 12, 222. https://doi.org/10.3390/cli12120222
Dayton L, Parker K, Ross J, Tharmarajah S, Latkin C. “Taking Action in Community Is Much, Much Preferable to Doing It Alone”: An Examination of Multi-Level Facilitators of and Barriers to Sustained Collective Climate Change Activism Among US Residents. Climate. 2024; 12(12):222. https://doi.org/10.3390/cli12120222
Chicago/Turabian StyleDayton, Lauren, Kelsie Parker, Julia Ross, Saraniya Tharmarajah, and Carl Latkin. 2024. "“Taking Action in Community Is Much, Much Preferable to Doing It Alone”: An Examination of Multi-Level Facilitators of and Barriers to Sustained Collective Climate Change Activism Among US Residents" Climate 12, no. 12: 222. https://doi.org/10.3390/cli12120222
APA StyleDayton, L., Parker, K., Ross, J., Tharmarajah, S., & Latkin, C. (2024). “Taking Action in Community Is Much, Much Preferable to Doing It Alone”: An Examination of Multi-Level Facilitators of and Barriers to Sustained Collective Climate Change Activism Among US Residents. Climate, 12(12), 222. https://doi.org/10.3390/cli12120222