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Expanded Citations for Edited Works and Textbooks
Bonnes, M., Lee, T., & Bonaiuto, M. (2003, Eds.). Psychological theories for
environmental issues. Wiltshire, UK: Antony Rowe Ltd. PUB
Includes:
Bonnes, M., Lee, T., & Bonaiuto, M., Theory and practice in
environmental psychology: An introduction, pp. 1-26.
Lee, T., Schema theory and the role of socio-spatial schemata in
environmental psychology, pp. 27-62.
Baroni, M. R., Cognitive processes theories and environmental
issues, pp. 63-94.
Bonaiuto, P., Giannini, A. M., & Biasi, V., Perception theories
and the environmental experience, pp. 95-136.
Giuliani, M. V., Theory of attachment and place attachment, pp.
137-170.
Staats, H., Understanding proenvironmental attitudes and behavior:
An analysis and review of research based on the theory of planned behavior, pp. 171-202.
Twigger-Ross, C., Bonaiuto, M., & Breakwell, G., Identity theories
and environmental psychology, pp. 203-234.
Aiello, A., & Bonaiuto, M., Rhetorical approach and discursive
psychology: The study of environmental discourse, pp. 235-270.
Clayton, S., & Opotow, S. (1994, Eds.). Green justice: Conceptions of fairness
and the natural world. Journal of Social Issues, 50(3).
Includes:
Opotow, S. & Clayton, S., Green justice: Conceptions of fairness and the natural world, pp. 1- 11.
Clayton, S., Appeals to justice in the environmental debate, pp. 13-27.
Robbins, J. G., & Greenwald, R., Environmental attitudes conceptualized through developmental theory: A qualitative analysis, pp. 29-47.
Opotow, S., Predicting protection: Scope of justice and the natural world, pp. 49-63.
Stern, P. C., & Dietz, T., The value basis of environmental concern, pp. 65-84.
Axelrod, L. J., Balancing personal needs with environmental preservation: Identifying the values that guide decisions in ecological dilemmas, pp. 85-104.
Seligman, C., Syme, G. J., & Gilchrist, R., The role of values and ethical principles in judgments of environmental dilemmas, pp. 105-119.
Laituri, M. & Kirby, A., Finding fairness in America's cities? The search for environmental equity in everyday life, pp. 121-139.
Finger, M., From knowledge to action? Exploring the relationships between environmental experiences, learning, and behavior, pp. 141-160.
Cvetkovich, G. & Earle, T. C., The construction of justice: A case study of public participation in land management, pp. 161-178.
Rasinski, K. A., Smith, T. W., & Zuckerbraun, S., Fairness motivations and tradeoffs underlying public support for government environmental spending in nine nations, pp. 179-197.
Clayton, S., & Opotow, S. (2003, Eds.). Identity and the natural environment.
Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. PUB
Includes:
Clayton, S., & Opotow, S., Introduction: Identity and the natural
environment, pp. 1-24.
Holmes, S. J., Some lives and some theories, pp. 25-42.
Part 1: Experiencing Nature as Individuals
Clayton, S., Environmental identity: A conceptual and an
operational definition.
Myers, G., & Russell, A., Human identity in relation to wild black
bears: A natural-social ecology of subjective creatures, pp. 67-90.
Gebbhard, U., Nevers, P., & Billmann-Mahecha, E., Moralizing trees:
Anthropomorphism and identity in children’s relationships to nature, pp. 91-112.
Kahn, P.H., The development of environmental moral identity, pp.
113-135.
Kals, E., & Ittner, H., Children’s environmental identity: Indicators
and behavioral impacts, pp. 135- 158.
Part 2: Experiencing Nature in Social and Community Contexts
Kalof, L., The human self and the animal others: Exploring
borderland identities, pp. 161-178.
Sommer, R., Trees and human identity, pp. 179-204.
Austin, M. E., & Kaplan, R., Identity, involvement, and expertise in
the inner city: Some benefits of tree-planting projects, pp. 205-226.
Linneweber, V., Hartmuth, G., & Fritsche, I., Representations of the
local environment as threatened by global climate change: Toward a contextualized analysis of environmental identity in a coastal area, pp. 227-256.
Part III: Experiencing Nature as Members of Social Groups
Opotow, S., & Brook, A., Identity and exclusion in rangeland
conflict, pp. 249-272.
Samuelson, C. D., Peterson, T. R., & Putnam, L. L., Group identity
and stakeholder conflict in water resource management, pp. 273- 296.
Zavestoski, S., Constructing and maintaining ecological identities:
The strategies of deep ecologists, pp. 297-316.
Kempton, W., & Holland, D. C., Identity and sustained
environmental practice, pp. 317-342.
Cvetkovich, G., & Earle, T. C. (1992, Eds.). Public responses to environmental
hazards. Journal of Social Issues, 48(4).
Includes:
Cvetkovich, G., & Earle, T. C., Environmental hazards and the public, pp. 1-20.
Dake, K., Myths of nature: Culture and the social construction of risk, pp. 21-37.
Freudenberg, W. R., & Pastor, S. K., NIMBYs and LULUs: Stalking the syndromes, pp. 39-61.
Weinstein, N. D., & Sandman, P. M., Predicting homeowners' mitigation responses to radon test data, pp. 63-83.
Bostrom, A., Fischoff, B., & Morgan, M. G., Characterizing mental models of hazardous processes: A methodlogy and an application to radon, pp. 85-100.
Hallman, W. K., & Wandersman, A., Attribution of responsibility and individual and collective coping with environmental threats, pp. 101-118.
Vaughn, E., & Seifert, M., Variability in the framing of risk issues, pp. 119-135.
Renn, O., Burns, W. J., Kasperson, J. X., Kasperson, R. E., & Slovic, P., The social amplification of risk: Theoretical foundations and empirical approaches, pp. 137-160.
Kasperson, R. E., Golding, D., & Tuler, S., Social distrust as a factor in siting hazardous facilities and communicating risks, pp. 161-187.
Datson, L. & Mitman, G. (2005, Eds.). Thinking with animals: New perspectives on
anthropomorphism. New York, N.Y.: Columbia University Press. PUB
Includes:
Introduction. The How and Why of Thinking with Animals, by Lorraine Daston and Gregg Mitman
1. Zoomorphism in Ancient India: Humans More Bestial Than the Beasts, by Wendy Doniger
2. Intelligences: Angelic, Animal, Human, by Lorraine Daston
3. The Experimental Animal in Victorian Britain, by Paul S. White
4. Comparative Psychology Meets Evolutionary Biology: Morgan's Canon and Cladistic Parsimony, by Elliott Sober
5. Anthropomorphism and Cross-Species Modeling, by Sandra D. Mitchell
6. People in Disguise: Anthropomorphism and the Human-Pet Relationship, by James A. Serpell
7. Digital Beasts as Visual Esperanto: Getty Images and the Colonization of Sight, by Cheryce Kramer
8. Pachyderm Personalities: The Media of Science, Politics, and Conservation, by Gregg Mitman
9. Reflections on Anthropomorphism in The Disenchanted Forest, by Sarita Siegel
Gardner, G.T. & Stern, P.C. (2002). Environmental problems and human
behavior (2nd ed.). Boston, MA: Pearson Custom Publishing. PUB
Includes:
Part 1: Introduction
Ch. 1- The earth’s environmental problems and the role of human behavior, pp. 1-20
Part 2: Environmental problems as “tragedies of the commons”—Behavioral solution strategies
Ch. 2- Environmental problems as tragedies of the commons, pp. 21-32
Ch. 3- Religious and moral approaches changing values, beliefs, and worldviews, pp. 33-70
Ch. 4- Educational interventions: Changing attitudes and providing information, pp. 71- 94
Ch. 5- Changing the incentives, pp. 95-124
Ch. 6- Community management of the commons, pp. 125-152
Ch. 7- Combining the solution strategies, pp. 153-174
Part 3: Human behavioral predispositions as aids or barriers to solutions
Ch. 8- Stone age genetic behavioral predispositions in the space age, pp. 175-204
Ch. 9- Human reactions to environmental hazards: perceptual and cognitive processes, pp. 205-252
Part 4: Behavioral Solutions in Context: Ecological and Societal Systems
Ch. 10- Choosing the behaviors to change and the points of intervention, pp. 253- 276
Ch. 11- Human interactions with complex systems: “Normal” accidents and counterintuitive system behavior, pp. 277- 316
Ch. 12- Human interactions with complex systems: Chaos, self-organizations, and the global environmental future
Gifford, R. (1995, Eds.). Green psychology. Journal of Environmental Psychology
(Special Issue).
Includes:
Kaplan, S. The restorative benefits of nature: Toward an integrative framework, pp. 169-182
Axelrod, L. J., & Suedfeld, P. Technology, capitalism, and christianity: Are they really the three horsemen of the eco-collapse?" pp. 183-195
Werner, C. M., Turner, J., Shipman, K., & Twitchell, F. S., et al. Commitment, behavior, and attitude change: An analysis of voluntary recycling, pp. 197-208.
Grob, A. A structural model of environmental attitudes and behavior, pp. 209-220.
Biel, A., and Garling, T. The role of uncertainty in resource dilemmas, pp. 221-233.
Reser, J. P. "Whither environmental psychology? The transpersonal ecopsychology crossroads," pp. 235-257
Kahn, P. H., Jr., & Kellert, S. R. (2002, Eds.). Children and nature: Psychological,
sociocultural, and evolutionary investigations. Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press. PUB
Includes:
Verbeek, P., & de Waal, F. B. M. The primate relationship with nature: Biophilia as a general pattern, pp. 1-28.
Heerwagen, J. H., & Orians, G. H. The ecological world of children, pp. 29-64.
Coley, J. D., Solomon, G. E. A., & Shafto, P. The development of folkbiology: A cognitive science perspective on children's understanding of the biological world, pp. 65-92.
Kahn, P. H., Jr. Children's affiliation with nature: Structure, development, and the problem of environmental generational amnesia, pp. 93-116.
Kellert, S. R. Experiencing nature: Affective, cognitive, and evaluative development in children, pp. 117-152.
Myers, O. E., Jr., & Saunders, C. D. Animals as links toward developing caring relationships with the natural world, pp. 153-178.
Katcher, A. Animals in therapeutic education: Guides into the liminal state, pp. 179-199.
Chawla, L. Spots of time: Manifold ways of being in nature in childhood, pp. 199-226.
Kaplan, R., & Kaplan, S. Adolescents and the natural environment: A time out? pp. 227-258
Thomashow, C. Adolescents and ecological identity: Attending to wild nature, pp. 259-278.
Orr, D. W. Political economy and the ecology of childhood, pp. 279-304.
Pyle, R. M. Eden in a vacant lot: Special places, species, and kids in the neighborhood of life, pp. 305-328.
Kasser, T., & Kanner, A. D. (2003, Eds.). Psychology and consumer culture:
The struggle for a good life in a materialistic world. Washington DC: American Psychological Association. PUB
Includes:
Kasser, T., & Kanner, A. D., Where is the psychology of consumer culture?, pp. 3-7.
I. Problems of Materialism, Capitalism, and Consumption
Kasser, T., Ryan, R. M., Couchman, C. E., & Sheldon, K. M., Materialistic values: Their causes and consequences, pp. 11- 28.
Solberg, E. G., Diener, E. & Robinson, M. D., Why are materialists less satisfied? pp. 29-48.
Kanner, A. D., & Soule, R. G., Globalization, corporate culture, and freedom, pp. 49-68.
Winter, D. D., Shopping for sustainability: Psychological solutions to overconsumption, pp. 69-87.
II. Theoretical Perspectives
Csikszentmihalyi, M., Materialism and the evolution of consiousness, pp. 91-106.
Rosenberg, E. L., Mindfulness and consumerism, pp. 107-126.
Solomon, S., Greenberg, J., & Pyszczynski, T. A., Lethal consumption: Death-denying materialism, pp. 127-146.
III. Clinical Issues
Kottler, J., Montgomery, M., & Shepard, D., Aquisitive desire: Assessment and treatment, pp. 149-168.
Faber, R. J., Self-control and compulsive buying, pp. 169-188.
Goldbart, S., Jaffe, D. T., & DiFuria, J., Money, meaning, and identity: Coming to terms with being wealthy, pp. 189-210.
IV: The Influence of Commercialism on Child Development
Levin, D. E., & Linn, S., The commercialization of childhood: Understanding the problem and finding solutions, pp. 213-232.
LaPoint, V. D., & Hambrick-Dixon, P. J., Commercialism's influence on Black youth: The case of dress-related challenges, pp. 233-250.
Kilbourne, J., "The more you subtract, the more you add": Cutting girls down to size, pp. 251-270.
Kellert, S. R. & Wilson, E. O. (1993, Eds.). The biophilia hypothesis.
Washington, DC: Island Press. PUB
Includes:
McVay, S., Prelude: "A Siamese connexion with a plurality of other mortals"
Kellert, S. R., Introduction
PART 1: Clarifying the Concept
Wilson, E. O., Biophilia and the conservation ethic
Kellert, S. R., The biological basis for human values of nature
Part 2: Affect and Aesthetics
Ulrich, R. S., Biophilia, biophobia, and natural landscapes
Heerwagen, J. H., & Orians, G. H., Humans, habitats, and aesthetics
Katcher, A., & Wilkins, G., Dialogue with animals: Its nature and culture
PART 3: Culture
Nelson, R., Searching for the lost arrow: Physical and spiritual ecology in the hunter's world
Nabhan, G. P., & St. Antoine, S., The loss of floral and faunal story: The extinction of experience
Diamond, J., New Guineans and their natural world
PART 4: Symbolism
Shepard, P., On animal friends
Lawrence, E. A., The sacred bee, the filthy pig, and the bat out of hell: Animal symbolism as cognitive biophilia
PART 5: Evolution
Sagan, D., & Margulis, L., God, Gaia, and biophilia
Gadgil, M., Of life and artifacts
PART 6: Ethics and Political Action
Rolston, H., III., Biophilia, selfish genes, shared values
Orr, D. W., Love it or lose it: The coming biophilia revolution
Soule, M. E., Biophilia: Unanswered questions
Lundberg, A. (1998, Ed.), The Environment and mental health: A guide for
clinicians. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates. PUB
Includes:
H. Frumkin, Foreword.
A. Lundberg, Introduction.
A. Lundberg, Environmental Change and Human Health.
B. Weiss, Behavioral Manifestations of Neurotoxicity.
A.A. Rahill, A. Lundberg, The Psychiatric Evaluation of Patients With Suspected Toxic Exposure.
A. Lundberg, A.L. Santiago-Rivera, Psychiatric Aspects of Technological Disasters.
M.J. Roy, Environmental Influences on Illnesses in Persian Gulf War Veterans.
K. Brailey, J.J. Vasterling, P.B. Sutker, Psychological Aftermath of Participation in the Persian Gulf War.
S.E. Spedden, Risk Perception and Coping.
B.B. Arnetz, Environmental Illness: Multiple Chemical Sensitivity, Sick Building Syndrome, Electric and Magnetic Field Disease.
H.L. Freeman, S.A. Stansfeld, Psychosocial Effects of Urban Environments, Noise, and Crowding.
R. White, J. Heerwagen, Nature and Mental Health: Biophilia and Biophobia.
A. Katcher, G.C. Wilkins, Animal-Assisted Therapy in the Treatment of Disruptive Behavior Disorders in Children.
R. White, Psychiatry and Ecopsychology.
Appendix: Environmental Information Resources for the Clinician.
Medin, D. L., & Atran, S. (1999, Eds.). Folkbiology. Cambridge, MA: The MIT
Press. PUB
Includes:
Medin, D. L., & Atran, S., Introduction
Diamond, J. & Bishop, K. D., Ethno-ornithology of the Ketengban People, Indonesian New Guinea
Hunn, E., Size as limiting the recognition of biodiversity in folkbiological classifications: One of four factors governing the cultural recognition of biological taxa
Berlin, B., How a folkbotanical system can be both natural and comprehensive: One Maya Indian's view of the plant world
Ellen, R., Models of subsistence and ethnobiological knowledge: Between extraction and cultivation in Southeast Asia
Atran, S., Itzaj Maya folkbiological taxonomy: Cognitive universals and cultural particulars
Coley, J. D., Medin, D. L., Proffitt, J. B., Lynch, E., & Atran, S., Inductive reasoning in folkbiological thought
Waxman, S. R., The dubbing ceremony revisited: Object naming and categorization in infancy and early childhood
Keil, F. C., Levin, D. T., Richman, B. A., & Gutheil, G., Mechanism and explanation in the development of biological thought: The case of disease
Hatano, G., & Inagaki, K., A developmental perspective on informal biology
Au, T. K., & Romo, L. F., Mechanical causality in children’s “folkbiology”
Gelman, S. A., & Hirschfeld, L. A., How biological is essentialism?
Ghiselin, M. T., Natural kinds and supraorganismal individuals
Dupré, J., Are whales fish?
Hull, D. L., Interdisciplinary dissonance
Mitchell, R. W., Nicholas, T. S., & Miles, H. L., (1997, Eds.). Anthropormorphism,
anecdotes and animals. Albany: State University of New York Press. PUB
Includes:
Foreword by
Frans B. M. de Waal
PART I. ATTITUDES, HISTORY, AND CULTURE
Taking Anthropomorphism and Anecdotes Seriously
Robert W. Mitchell, Nicholas S. Thompson, and H. Lyn Miles
Dogs, Darwinism, and English Sensibilities
Elizabeth Knoll
Why Anthropomorphism Is Not Metaphor: Crossing Concepts and Cultures in Animal Behavior Studies
Pamela J. Asquith
PART II. THE NATURE OF ANTHROPOMORPHISM
Amorphism, Mechanomorphism, and Anthropomorphism
Emanuela Cenami Spada
Anthropomorphism: A Definition and a Theory
Stewart Elliott Guthrie
Why Anthropomorphize? Folk Psychology and Other Stories
Linnda R. Caporael and Cecilia M. Heyes
PART III. ANTHROPOMORPHISM AND MENTAL STATE ATTRIBUTION
Anthropomorphism and the Evolution of Social Intelligence: A Comparative Approach
Gordon G. Gallup Jr., Lori Marino, and Timothy J. Eddy
Panmorphism
Daniel J. Povinelli
Anthropomorphism and Scientific Evidence for Animal Mental States
Hugh Lehman
Anthropomorphism in Mother-Infant Interaction: Cultural Imperative or Scientific Acumen?
Robert L. Russell
PART IV. ANECTODES AND ANTHROPOMORPHISM
Anecdote, Anthropomorphism, and Animal Behavior
Bernard E. Rollin
What's the Use of Anecdotes? Distinguishing Psychological Mechanisms in Primate Tactical Deception
Richard W. Byrne
Anthropomorphic Anecdotalism As Method
Robert W. Mitchell
A Pragmatic Approach to the Inference of Animal Mind
Paul S. Silverman
PART V. INTENTIONALITY
Varieties of Purposive Behavior
Ruth Garrett Millikan
Expressions of Mind in Animal Behavior
Colin Beer
PART VI. CONSCIOUSNESS AND SELF-CONSCIOUSNESS
Self-Awareness, with Specific References to Coleoid Cephalopods
Martin H. Moynihan
Silent Partners? Observations on Some Systematic Relations among Observer Perspective, Theory, and Behavior
Duane Quiatt
Common Sense and the Mental Lives of Animals: An Empirical Approach
Harold A. Herzog and Shelley Galvin
Amending Tinbergen: A Fifth Aim for Ethology
Gordon M. Burghardt
A Phenomenological Approach to the Study of Nonhuman Animals
Kenneth J. Shapiro
Anthropomorphism, Anecdotes, and Mirrors
Karyl B. Swartz and Siân Evans
PART VII. COGNITION
Cognitive Ethology: Slayers, Skeptics, and Proponenets
Marc Bekoff and Colin Allen
Animal Cognition Versus Animal Thinking: The Anthropomorphic Error
Hank Davis
Anthropomorphism Is the Null Hypothesis and Recapitulationism Is the Bogeyman in Comparative Developmental Evolutionary Studies
Sue Taylor Parker
PART VIII. LANGUAGE
Anthropocentrism and the Study of Animal Language
Judith Kiriazis and Con N. Slobodchikoff
Pinnipeds, Porpoises, and Parsimony: Animal Language Research Viewed from a Bottom-up Perspective
Ronald J. Schusterman and Robert C. Gisiner
Anthropomorphism, Apes, and Language
H. Lyn Miles
PART IX. COMPARING PERSPECTIVES
Anthropomorphism and Anecdotes: A Guide for the Perplexed
Robert W. Mitchell
Roberts, E. (1998). Ecopsychology (special issue). Humanistic Psychologist, 26(1-3).
Includes:
Roberts, E., Place and the human spirit, pp. 5-34.
Metzner, R., The place and the story: Ecopsychology and bioregionalism, pp. 35-49.
Day, M. D., Ecopsychology and the restoration of home, pp. 51-67.
David, J., The transpersonal dimensions of ecopsychology: Nature, nonduality, and spiritual practice, pp. 69-100.
Kanner, A. D., Mount Rushmore Syndrome: When narcissism rules the Earth, pp. 101-121.
Hoffman, C., The Hoop and the Tree: An ecological model of health, pp. 123-154.
Anthony, C. & Soule, R., A multicultural approach to ecopsychology, pp. 155-161.
Sewall, L., Looking for a worldview: Perceptual practice in an ecological age, pp. 163-177.
Conn, S. A., Living in the Earth: Ecopsychology, health and psychotherapy, pp. 179-198.
Foster, S., The yellow brick road: Coming of age in the wilderness, pp. 199-216.
Gomes, M. E., Personal transformation and social change: Conversations with ecopsychologists in action, pp. 217-241.
Feral, C. H., The connectedness model and optimal development: Is ecopsychology the answer to emotional well-being? pp. 243-274
Thomashaw, M., The ecopsychology of global environmental change, pp. 275-300.
Horesh, T., Discovering and providing for the experience of nature, pp. 301-312.
Roszak, T., Gomes, M. E., & Kanner, A. D. (1995, Eds.). Ecopsychology: Restoring the
earth, healing the mind. San Francisco: Sierra Club Books. PUB
Includes:
Brown, L. R. Ecopsychology and the environmental revolution: An environmental foreword, pp. xiii-xvi.
Hillman, J. A psyche the size of the earth: A psychological foreword, pp. xvii-xxiii.
Roszak, T. Where Psyche meets Gaia, pp. 1-17.
ONE: Theoretical Perspectives
Shepard, P. Nature and madness, pp. 21-40.
Glendinning, C. Technology, trauma, and the wild, pp. 41-54.
Metzner, R. The psychopathology of the human-nature relationship, pp. 55-67.
Durning, A. T. Are we happy yet? pp. 68-76.
Kanner, A. D. & Gomes, M. E. The all-consuming self, pp. 77-91.
Aizenstat, S. Jungian psychology and the world unconscious, pp. 92-100.
Barrows, A. The ecopsychology of child development, pp. 101-110.
Gomes, M. E. & Kanner, A. D. The rape of the well-maidens: Feminist psychology and the environmental crisis, pp. 111-121.
Greenway, R. The wilderness effect and ecopsychology, pp. 122-135.
Windle, P. The ecology of grief, pp. 136-145.
TWO: Ecopsychology in Practice
O'Connor, T. Therapy for a dying planet, pp. 149-155.
Conn, S. A. When the earth hurts, who responds? pp. 156-171.
Gray, L. Shamanic counseling and ecopsychology, pp. 172-182.
Harper, S. The way of wilderness, pp. 183-200.
Sewall, L. The skill of ecological perception, pp. 201-215.
Cahlan, W. Ecological groundedness in gestalt therapy, pp. 216-223.
Shapiro, E. Restoring habitats, communities, and souls, pp. 224-239.
Macy, J. Working through environmental despair, pp. 240-259.
THREE: Cultural Diversity and Political Engagement
Anthony, C. Ecopsychology and the deconstruction of whiteness, pp. 263-278.
Mack, J. E. The politics of species arrogance, pp. 279-287.
Roszak, B. The spirit of the goddess, pp. 288-300.
Abram, D. The ecology of magic, pp. 301-315.
Armstrong, J. Keepers of th earth, pp. 316-324.
Saunders, C. D., & Myers, O. E. (2003, Eds.) Exploring the potential of conservation
psychology. Human Ecology Review (special issue), 10(2).
Includes:
Saunders, C. D. (2003). The emerging field of conservation psychology.
Followed by responses:
Beringer, A., Conservation psychology with heart.
Bixler, R., Segmenting audiences and positioning conservation interventions.
Borden, R., Conservation psychology: The practice of compassion
Chawla, L., People to people: A vital component of people-nature relationships.
Csikszentmihalyi, M., Creating disciplinary transformation and forging a planetary psychology.
DeYoung, R., If we build it, people will want to help: The management of citizen participation in conservation psychology.
Mascia, M., Conservation psychology: Challenges and opportunities.
Meine, C., Conservation psychology as self-liberation.
Opotow, S., What makes people care? Moral inclusion and conservation psychology.
Reser, J. P., Thinking through “conservation psychology”: Prospects and challenges.
Salafsky, N., Making conservation psychology relevant to practitioners.
Sommer, R., Action research and big fuzzy concepts.
Stern, P. C., How can conservation psychology become influential?
Tanner, C., Steps to transdisiplinary sustainability research.
Tyson, C. B., Applying psychology to conservation.
Winter, D. D., Intellectual growth management.
Zavestoski, S., Why conservation psychology?
Schmuck, P., & Schultz, W. P. (2002, Eds.). Psychology of sustainable development.
Boston: Kluwer Academic Publishers. MORE PUB
Includes:
Schmuck, P. & Schultz, P. W., Sustainable development as a
challenge for psychology (pp. 3-18).
McKenzie-Mohr, D., The next revolution: Sustainability, pp. 19-36.
Osbaldiston, R. & Sheldon, K. M. (2002). Social dilemmas and
sustainability: Promoting peoples’ motivation to “cooperate withthe future,” (pp. 37-58).
Schultz, P. W., Inclusion with nature: The psychology of human-
nature relations, pp. 61-78.
Winter, D. D., (En)gendering sustainable development, pp. 79-96.
Kals, E., & Maes, J., Sustainable development and emotions, PP.
97-122.
Degenhardt, L., Why do people act in sustainable ways? Results of
an empirical survey of lifestyle pioneers, pp. 123-148.
Gouveia, V. V., Self, culture, and sustainable development, pp.
151-174.
Cock, P. H., Partnerships for sustainability: Psychology for ecology,
pp. 175-196.
du Toit, J. T., Sustainable wildlife utilization in Africa: A contest between scientific understanding and human nature, pp. 197-
208.
Bandura, A., Environmental sustainability by sociocognitive
deceleration of population growth, pp. 208-238.
Eigner, S., & Schmuck, P., Motivating collective action: Converting
to sustainable energy sources in a German community, 241-256.
Jiménez-Domínguez, B., Which kind of sustainability for a social environmental psychology? Pp. 257-276.
Friedman, M., Using organized consumer action to foster
sustainability, pp. 277-298.
Oskamp, S., Summarizing sustainability issues and research
approaches, pp. 301-324.
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