Metro pres lertzman

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Between dire and hopeful: community outreach, communications and climate Renee Lertzman, Ph.D. Fellow, Portland Center for Public Humanities Portland State University [email protected]

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Transcript of Metro pres lertzman

Page 1: Metro pres lertzman

Between dire and hopeful: community outreach,

communications and climate

Renee Lertzman, Ph.D.Fellow, Portland Center for Public HumanitiesPortland State [email protected]

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Interrupting the cycle

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Where we’re at…

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psychology of climate change communications

• Focuses primarily on cognition, information processing and rational processes

• Emphasis on proximity, abstraction and immediacy

• Using a “barriers” to engagement framework

• Focuses centrally on values and the so-called “attitude-behavior gap”

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Reframing: from barriers to opportunities

• Emotions as central for how we respond to climate change issues (Norgaard, 2011)

• Unconscious dimensions such as anxiety, fear, hope and loss (Randall, 2009)

• Necessity for creative engagement and participation (participatory processes)

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Research study: The Great Lakes and Green Bay

• Chose a field site ecologically troubled, industrial

• Interviewed ten participants in “not engaged” range

• Conducted interviews using psychosocial methods

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Research study: The Great Lakes and Green Bay

• Chose a field site ecologically troubled, industrial

• Interviewed ten participants in “not engaged” range

• Conducted interviews using psychosocial methods

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inspiration and context

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living the Great Lakes

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Desires, dilemmas, hopes, fears

• In-depth interviews

• Accounting for contradiction, dilemmas

• Attention to emotions and affect

• Exploring relations between information and actions

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What I found

• Strong narratives of concern and care • Ambivalence regarding action and

involvement• Pride and honor of place (industry)• Sadness and dismay, despair of degradation• Self-opting out of action (identity,

ambivalence)• Contradicting desires and fears

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Howard, 69, Green Bay native

• Deep love of nature, water, environment

• Strong stewardship

• Father’s accident with the paper mill

• Attachment to “Paddle to the Sea”

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So what does this mean for us?

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The importance of emotional (irrational) dimensions

Most social behavior from SUV ownership to frequent flying, far from being a simple response to inducements or threats, is mediated by meanings, narratives, identities and feelings.

As communicators and engagement professionals we need to build this into our work.

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communications that allow for:

- Coexistence of conflicting desires and aspirations

- Addressing potential anxieties at the get-go

- Anticipating potential fears and loss

- Focusing on solutions and strategies in context of the above

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Rethinking ‘engagement’

• Investing resources for exploring concern, fears, hopes, etc.

• Meeting people where they are • Development of tools to encourage creative

investment• Accommodation for difficult or reactive

responses (to climate-related initiatives)• Focus on concern, rather that it’s absence

(‘apathy’ or ‘barriers’)

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How effective are our communications?

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