How Affinity With Places Affects the Indirect Experience of Climate Extreme Weather Events

When news media talk about climate change, they often report on extreme weather in places around the world. One factor that may explain perceptions of such reports and reactions to them is people’s relationships with affected places. We test a framework of place affinity, as indicated...

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Main Authors: Elias Keller, John E. Marsh, Beth H. Richardson, Linden J. Ball
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PsychOpen GOLD/ Leibniz Institute for Psychology 2025-02-01
Series:Global Environmental Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5964/gep.10749
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author Elias Keller
John E. Marsh
Beth H. Richardson
Linden J. Ball
author_facet Elias Keller
John E. Marsh
Beth H. Richardson
Linden J. Ball
author_sort Elias Keller
collection DOAJ
description When news media talk about climate change, they often report on extreme weather in places around the world. One factor that may explain perceptions of such reports and reactions to them is people’s relationships with affected places. We test a framework of place affinity, as indicated by several place beliefs, to describe these people-place relationships. Based on previous research and two pilot studies, we employed a three-condition between-participants experiment to test whether place affinity helps explain reactions to news reports. Participants (N = 972) were either shown one of two reports on extreme flooding events in high-affinity and low-affinity countries or a general article on climate change and flooding (control condition). Reading about extreme weather in a high-affinity place invoked stronger emotional reactions than for other conditions. There were no differences in risk perception, policy support or behaviour between conditions. Participants’ open responses to news articles provided evidence of emotion-focused, problem-focused and meaning-focused strategies, as well as an absence of emotion-regulation. Our study thus contributes to the literature by testing our theoretical framework of place affinity and by investigating factors shaping the effectiveness of climate coverage.
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spelling doaj-art-39cfcffd036b44df83b7e2e0bd38fc182025-08-20T02:12:38ZengPsychOpen GOLD/ Leibniz Institute for PsychologyGlobal Environmental Psychology2750-66302025-02-01310.5964/gep.10749gep.10749How Affinity With Places Affects the Indirect Experience of Climate Extreme Weather EventsElias Keller0https://orcid.org/0000-0003-4478-0400John E. Marsh1https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9494-1287Beth H. Richardson2https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8738-9925Linden J. Ball3https://orcid.org/0000-0002-5099-0124School of Psychology and Computer Science, University of Central Lancashire, Preston, United KingdomSchool of Psychology and Computer Science, University of Central Lancashire, Preston, United KingdomSchool of Psychology and Computer Science, University of Central Lancashire, Preston, United KingdomSchool of Psychology and Computer Science, University of Central Lancashire, Preston, United KingdomWhen news media talk about climate change, they often report on extreme weather in places around the world. One factor that may explain perceptions of such reports and reactions to them is people’s relationships with affected places. We test a framework of place affinity, as indicated by several place beliefs, to describe these people-place relationships. Based on previous research and two pilot studies, we employed a three-condition between-participants experiment to test whether place affinity helps explain reactions to news reports. Participants (N = 972) were either shown one of two reports on extreme flooding events in high-affinity and low-affinity countries or a general article on climate change and flooding (control condition). Reading about extreme weather in a high-affinity place invoked stronger emotional reactions than for other conditions. There were no differences in risk perception, policy support or behaviour between conditions. Participants’ open responses to news articles provided evidence of emotion-focused, problem-focused and meaning-focused strategies, as well as an absence of emotion-regulation. Our study thus contributes to the literature by testing our theoretical framework of place affinity and by investigating factors shaping the effectiveness of climate coverage.https://doi.org/10.5964/gep.10749climate change perceptionclimate change mitigationpolicy acceptanceextreme weatherpsychological distance
spellingShingle Elias Keller
John E. Marsh
Beth H. Richardson
Linden J. Ball
How Affinity With Places Affects the Indirect Experience of Climate Extreme Weather Events
Global Environmental Psychology
climate change perception
climate change mitigation
policy acceptance
extreme weather
psychological distance
title How Affinity With Places Affects the Indirect Experience of Climate Extreme Weather Events
title_full How Affinity With Places Affects the Indirect Experience of Climate Extreme Weather Events
title_fullStr How Affinity With Places Affects the Indirect Experience of Climate Extreme Weather Events
title_full_unstemmed How Affinity With Places Affects the Indirect Experience of Climate Extreme Weather Events
title_short How Affinity With Places Affects the Indirect Experience of Climate Extreme Weather Events
title_sort how affinity with places affects the indirect experience of climate extreme weather events
topic climate change perception
climate change mitigation
policy acceptance
extreme weather
psychological distance
url https://doi.org/10.5964/gep.10749
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