Background
As society grows increasingly concerned about the impending threat of global climate change, young people in particular report feeling anxious, angry, and helpless (Marks et al., 2021). Snyder et al.’s (1991) theory of hope may help to understand what promotes agency around climate action. Adolescents and adults who report higher levels of hope about the climate engage in more individual pro-environment behaviors (Kerret et al., 2016; Ojala, 2012) and report higher levels of dispositional hope (Li & Monroe, 2017). However, no research to date has considered how climate perceptions affect these relationships.
Aims
The present study aimed to understand the role of dispositional hope, optimism, and climate perceptions in predicting climate hope. It was hypothesized that optimism and dispositional hope would predict climate hope, and that alarm about climate change would moderate the relationship such that those feeling most alarmed would be least likely to generalize dispositional hope to hope regarding climate change.
Method
A diverse sample of 278 US young adults (aged 18-35, 49% male, 57% white) were recruited via CloudResearch. Participants completed Snyder’s Adult Hope Scale, the Life Orientation Test-Revised, the Climate Hope Scale, and the Six Americas Climate Change Perceptions Inventory.
Results
Results demonstrated that hope (r=.374) and optimism (r=.267) were both positively correlated with climate hope. However, only dispositional hope (β=.342, p<.001) and not optimism (β=.070, p=.358) made a significant contribution in predicting climate hope when entered into a model together. While climate alarm did significantly moderate the relationship between dispositional and climate hope (f2=.030), the moderation occurred such that higher levels of alarm predicted a stronger relationship between climate and dispositional hope.
Conclusion
Results suggest that dispositional hope may a buffer against negative emotions and hopelessness about climate change, fostering a sense of personal and communal agency to address this ecological threat. Further, results highlight dispositional hope as a protective asset in the face of global adversity.