THE Teachers


LORRAINE WHITMARSH

University of Bath, UK

 

Professor Lorraine Whitmarsh, MBE, is an environmental psychologist, specialising in perceptions and behaviour in relation to climate change, energy and transport, based in the Department of Psychology, University of Bath. She is Director of the ESRC-funded UK Centre for Climate Change and Social Transformations (CAST). She regularly advises governmental and other organisations on low-carbon behaviour change and climate change communication, was one of the expert leads for Climate Assembly UK, and Lead Author for IPCC’s Working Group II Sixth Assessment Report. Her research projects have included studies of meat consumption, energy efficiency behaviours, waste reduction and carrier bag reuse, perceptions of smart technologies and electric vehicles, low-carbon lifestyles, and responses to climate change.

 

KEYNOTE TOPIC: "ENGAGING THE PUBLIC WITH CLIMATE CHANGE"

WORKSHOP III: "CHANGING BEHAVIOUR TO TACKLE THE CLIMATE CRISIS"

 

 


 

KIM-PONG TAM

Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, Hong Kong

 

Kim-Pong Tam is interested in humans’ connection to nature and their responses to global environmental change. His primary research focus is to understand how people construe their relationship with nature and the emotional and behavioral implications of such construal. Some examples of his output in this direction include his works on anthropomorphism of nature, connectedness to nature, empathy with nature, and, most recently, gratitude to nature. Another research focus of his is to uncover the cross-national variability of phenomena regarding environmental attitude and pro-environmental behavior. For example, he demonstrated that the relationship between environmental concern and environmental action varies systematically along the cultural orientations and political contexts in different societies. In two recent systematic reviews, he also observed that psychological research regarding climate change specifically and human-environment relationships in general requires an expansion in terms of geographic representation. In his recent projects, he has expanded his interest to the understanding of the socio-political dynamics behind people’s collective responses to environmental problems and also the various psychological processes behind public support for climate change policies. Kim-Pong Tam is currently the Editor-in-Chief of Asian Journal of Social Psychology and an Associate Editor of Journal of Pacific Rim Psychology and PsyEcology. He is also serving on the editorial boards of Journal of Environmental Psychology, Global Environmental Psychology, PLOS Climate, Personality and Social Psychology Review, British Journal of Social Psychology, and Royal Society Open Science.

 

 

KEYNOTE TOPIC: "ENRICHING ENVIRONMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY WITH CROSS-CULTURAL AND CROSS-NATIONAL COMPARISONS"

 

WORKSHOP I
TOPIC: "CONDUCTING YOUR OWN CROSS-CULTURAL/ CROSS-NATIONAL STUDY"

 

 


 

HELEN LANDMANN

FernUniversität in Hagen, Germany

 

Dr. Helen Landmann is a community psychologist combining environmental and social psychology. Her research focuses on the role of emotions in the context of environmental protection and migration. She is spokesperson of the research cluster “Emotions and Norms for Sustainable Development” at the FernUniversität in Hagen and spokesperson of the “Expert Network for Social Psychology on Forced Migration and Integration”. Together with other members of the “Initiative Environmental Psychology” (IPU e.V.), she develops open educational resources on psychology of socio-ecological change.

 

KEYNOTE TOPIC: "EMOTIONS AND COLLECTIVE CLIMATE ACTION"

WORKSHOP II

TOPIC: "EMOTIONAL REACTIONS TOWARDS NATURE"


junior presenters

Aurore Grandin
Correcting misperceptions about personal carbon emissions: The role of the carbon footprint feedback and social comparison

 

Robert Avery
Gendered reactions towards environmental minority influence. A tale of loss, threat and dominance

 

Sonja Grelle
The desire for governmental support as a motivational foundation of climate policy acceptance

 

Tania Noël
The impact of urban greenery and perceived crowdedness on climate change related motions

 

Elisabeth Glunz
The impact of an extreme weather event on mental health in Mongolia

 

Susanne Nicolai
The role of justice sensitivity and moral disengagement in pro-environmental intention

 

Tini Katz
Does it challenge your worldview? Examining the role of need for accommodation in awe

 

Yu Shuang Gan
Attention, gaze and decisions: Carbon footprint labels did not encourage more sustainable food choices

 

Lena Lehrer
Frames for future - Can health frames in climate change communication help enhance policy approval?

 

Miriam Finkhäuser
A panel study on ambivalence and meat consumption

 

Xinran Wang
How is responsibility towards taking climate actions perceived and attributed among different societal actors

 

Valentina Kroker
Effects of financial and prosocial incentives on pro-environmental behaviour

Fantine Surret
Promoting children’s pro-environmental behaviors with cooperative learning: An intervention study with 5th and 6th graders


Poster presentations

Hellen Temme

Barriers to climate change mitigation and adaptation - an interdisciplinary expert perspective

Lara Trani

Travel the world to feel part of it? The relations between long-term stays abroad, global identity, and nature connectedness

 

Tilmann Hüppauff

Valuing less. Meaning, motivation and wellbeing of sufficieny behaviour

 

Helena Schmidt

Resident´s perceptions of energy-producing kites: findings from the first community acceptance study of an airborne wind energy test site

 

Viktoria Allert

Social identity based motivation to engage in collective action supporting the redistribution of street space

 

Tatyana Thye

The role of social identity in promoting environmental behavior - a systematic literature review

 

Michelle Lohmeyer
Can sharing make mobility greener? - The case of community car-sharing