Susan Clayton the First Guest on Environmental Identities Program

WOOSTER, Ohio 鈥 Susan Clayton, an internationally-known expert on conservation psychology and the Whitmore-Williams Professor of Psychology at 糖心Vlog传媒, was the inaugural guest of Environmental Identities, a new series presented by the Jan van Eyck Academie in Maastricht, The Netherlands. The program, which debuted on June 16, defines itself as 鈥減ublic conversations, screenings, and other online and offline events in pursuit of a multi-layered understanding of the co-defining relation between self- and social identity and the natural environment.鈥
Environmental identity is a new concept for many, so Clayton was first asked to help define and explain it. 鈥淎 personal sense of connection to the natural world, and I think a useful way to think about it is to think about other sources of identity. National identity, professional identity. We have multiple identities and they affect how we think about ourselves. Again, we just don鈥檛 have a single identity, and sometimes it changes over time. So, sometimes you may be very aware of your 鈥 identity, and other times you鈥檙e not thinking about it at all,鈥 she said.
Clayton also emphasized that environmental identity is 鈥渟omething everyone can have, but it varies in strength from one individual to another,鈥 and noted 鈥渁 big influence is how you were brought up. Your childhood experiences. Certainly being out in nature is going to be important both as a child and even as an adult of how to create and activate your environmental identity.鈥
The moderator went on to ask Clayton about several other environmental identity-related topics, including the level of importance different cultures place on environment, moral and ethical components to protecting nature, the mental health aspect of climate change, COVID-19鈥檚 impact, and much more.
Clayton shared several interesting thoughts on COVID-19, commenting that it鈥檚 a reminder 鈥渙f (our) interdependence on the natural world鈥 and 鈥渉ow we are subject to a perturbation, a disturbance in the environment.鈥 She warned that 鈥渁t some level, (this) was a consequence of our behavior by human infringement on natural habitats for example, so it kind of reminds us of that entanglement and simultaneously says you need to change your behavior to avoid this kind of thing happening in the future.鈥
Labeling it a 鈥減otential transition point,鈥 the hopeful Clayton also suggested some actionable items that can be taken to strengthen one鈥檚 environmental identity, such as substituting business travel for more on-line events and meetings, which will lead to a 鈥渉uge reduction in carbon emissions.鈥 This time in history is 鈥渞eminding people of their identity and the values that identity promotes might encourage them to behave in more pro-environmental ways,鈥 she said.
The complete 77-minute webcast, which also includes a question-and-answer session with scholars at the Jan Van Eyck Academie, is available to view on .
The Jan van Eyck Academie, established in 1948, is a multi-disciplinary, post-academic institute offering residencies to artists, designers, researchers, writers, curators, and architects. Every year, the program welcomes 40 international participants, providing them time, space, and expertise needed to develop their art practice in depth.
Posted in News on June 23, 2020.
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