Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Foreword
- Preface: The Actively Caring for People (AC4P) Movement
- About the Authors
- Acknowledgments
- INTRODUCTION TO PART I EVIDENCE-BASED PRINCIPLES OF AC4P
- INTRODUCTION TO PART II APPLICATIONS OF AC4P PRINCIPLES
- 9 Actively Caring for Occupational Safety
- 10 Cultivating an AC4P Culture in Organizations
- 11 Actively Caring for Traffic Safety
- 12 Actively Caring to Prevent Alcohol Abuse
- 13 Actively Caring for Obesity
- 14 Actively Caring for Patient-Centered Healthcare
- 15 Actively Caring for Our Children
- 16 Actively Caring for Preschoolers
- 17 Actively Caring Coaching for Young Athletes
- 18 Actively Caring for Higher Education
- 19 Actively Caring for Mother Earth
- 20 The AC4P Power of Pets
- Epilogue: Where Do We Go from Here?
- Subject and Name Index
- References
19 - Actively Caring for Mother Earth
from INTRODUCTION TO PART II - APPLICATIONS OF AC4P PRINCIPLES
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 March 2016
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Foreword
- Preface: The Actively Caring for People (AC4P) Movement
- About the Authors
- Acknowledgments
- INTRODUCTION TO PART I EVIDENCE-BASED PRINCIPLES OF AC4P
- INTRODUCTION TO PART II APPLICATIONS OF AC4P PRINCIPLES
- 9 Actively Caring for Occupational Safety
- 10 Cultivating an AC4P Culture in Organizations
- 11 Actively Caring for Traffic Safety
- 12 Actively Caring to Prevent Alcohol Abuse
- 13 Actively Caring for Obesity
- 14 Actively Caring for Patient-Centered Healthcare
- 15 Actively Caring for Our Children
- 16 Actively Caring for Preschoolers
- 17 Actively Caring Coaching for Young Athletes
- 18 Actively Caring for Higher Education
- 19 Actively Caring for Mother Earth
- 20 The AC4P Power of Pets
- Epilogue: Where Do We Go from Here?
- Subject and Name Index
- References
Summary
Thank God men cannot fly, and lay waste the sky as well as the earth.
– Henry David ThoreauThis chapter addresses the human dynamics of environmental protection and ecological sustainability. An ecologically sustainable future depends on a large-scale increase in environmentally responsible behavior (ERB) and a global decrease in environmentally harmful behavior (EHB). Some behaviors degrade the environment, while others protect our Mother Earth. Indeed, the sustainability of our planet is inextricably linked to human behavior. Consider the issues that confront and challenge environmental resources: overpopulation; climate change; loss of biodiversity; inadequate access to water; ocean acidification; pollution; ozone layer depletion; the extinction of many fish species; and deforestation.
Applied behavioral science (ABS) can play a crucial role in addressing our environmental crises. Almost three decades ago, B. F. Skinner defined this crisis elegantly and succinctly:
Most thoughtful people agree that the world is in serious trouble … fossil fuels will not last forever, and many other critical resources are nearing exhaustion; the earth grows steadily less habitable; and all this is exacerbated by a burgeoning population that resists control. The timetable may not be clear, but the threat is real. That many people have begun to find a recital of these dangers tiresome is perhaps an even greater threat.
Some claim our environmental crisis has reached proportions beyond salvation; others maintain a relentless optimism regarding planetary concerns. A “business as usual” stance has been adopted in some quarters (as if environmental problems will correct themselves naturally); others believe high-technology engineering, physics, biology, and chemistry will rescue us.
Today, organizations and individuals routinely incorporate “green” or pro-environment ideas into their language, but the rhetoric has not resulted in large-scale actively caring behaviors on behalf of Mother Earth. Or noticeably positive results. We have a problem of environmental sustainability and a problem of human denial, helplessness, and apathy.
Current theories and intervention approaches need to be considered (which are reviewed in this chapter) if the three main sources of the earth's environmental threats are to be effectively addressed – human overpopulation, overconsumption, and underconservation.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Applied PsychologyActively Caring for People, pp. 594 - 622Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2016
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