Research Seminar Series: Professor Leaf Van Boven

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Speaker: Professor Leaf Van Boven,  University of Colorado Boulder
Title: As the World Burns:

Psychological Barriers to Addressing Climate Change and Covid-19—And How to Overcome Them

Date: Thursday, 3 April 2025 
Time: 10:00am – 12:00pm
Venue: Allan Barton Forum, Level 2, CBE Building 26C

Kimin Eom is the host of this visit.

Bio

Leaf Van Boven is a Professor and Chair of the Department of Psychology and Neuroscience at the University of Colorado Boulder. He has a B.S. in Psychology from the University of Washington (1995) and a Ph.D. in Psychology from Cornell University (2000). Professor Van Boven’s research integrates social, environmental, and political psychology. He uses laboratory experiments, national surveys, and field studies to examine the processes that shape people’s everyday lives. His research has been funded by the National Science Foundation. Professor Van Boven co-directs the Environment, Decision, Judgment, and Identity lab and the Center for Creative Climate Communication and Behavior Change.

 

Abstract

Addressing the most pressing issues of our time, from climate change to pandemics, requires the enactment of effective public policies. What are the psychological barriers to broad public support for such policies? What do these barriers tell us about how the social mind works? Our work suggests that liberals and conservatives disagree about effective policy solutions mainly for the sake of disagreement. Liberals and conservatives support climate and COVID-19 policies when political leaders from their party support them more than the same policies proposed by political leaders from the opposing political party. Such arbitrary partisanship is multiply determined. In part, people expect their partisan peers to toe the party line, and they follow these partisan norms. Partisans also dislike and distrust members of the opposing political party, which undermines support for proposals from opposing parties. Although daunting, an appreciation of psychological barriers suggests strategies to overcome them. For example, policies proposed by trusted experts and bipartisan coalitions prevent polarization. Learning about widespread bipartisan support from ordinary people increases people’s policy support. And highlighting people’s values regarding good citizenship reduces political polarization. These findings illustrate how psychological scientists can help solve daunting societal challenges.  

Event Details

Start Date
End Date
Venue
Allan Barton Forum, Level 2, CBE Building 26C