Climate action now: How to fuel a social movement

Author:

Lteif Lama1ORCID,Nardini Gia2ORCID,Rank‐Christman Tracy3ORCID,Block Lauren4,Bublitz Melissa G.5ORCID,Catlin Jesse R.6ORCID,Cross Samantha N. N.7,Hamby Anne8ORCID,Peracchio Laura A.910

Affiliation:

1. Anderson School of Management The University of New Mexico Albuquerque New Mexico USA

2. College of Business Florida Atlantic University Boca Raton Florida USA

3. Lubar College of Business University of Wisconsin‐Milwaukee Milwaukee Wisconsin USA

4. Baruch College City University of New York New York New York USA

5. School of Human Ecology University of Wisconsin‐Madison Madison Wisconsin USA

6. College of Business California State University, Sacramento Sacramento California USA

7. Ivy College of Business Iowa State University Ames Iowa USA

8. School of Business Boise State University Boise Idaho USA

9. University of Chicago Chicago Illinois USA

10. Sheldon B. Lubar College of Business University of Wisconsin‐Milwaukee Milwaukee Wisconsin USA

Abstract

AbstractOur research develops a framework that explores how to fuel the climate movement by accelerating grassroots, community‐based climate action. Drawing on insights from consumer psychology, our framework identifies the psychological mechanisms that encourage and motivate people, both individually and collectively, to take climate action, thereby contributing to our understanding of how to advance social action and propel a social movement. Our climate action framework builds on: (1) individuals we describe as climate upstanders who rise up to take climate action with like‐minded others, and (2) communities of climate upstanders who engage in collective action aimed at addressing the climate crisis. Our framework expands the field of consumer psychology by redefining the role of consumers to include the practice of social action and broadening the study of consumers to include collective, community‐based action. We call on consumer psychologists to research individual and collective consumer practices related to social action and contribute to making social good central to the study of consumer psychology.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Marketing,Applied Psychology

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