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Dr Lorraine Whitmarsh - BA Kent, MSc Bath, PhD Bath

Overview

person name Research Group: Social Psychology
Location: Tower Building, Park Place
Email: WhitmarshLE@cardiff.ac.uk

Telephone: +44(0)29 208 76972

Research Summary

I am interested in the psychological and social dimensions of environmental, risk and sustainability issues. My research, which employs both quantitative and qualitative methods of data collection and analysis, focuses on three main areas: (a) public engagement with climate change, carbon literacy, carbon offsetting, and low-carbon lifestyles; (b) public/stakeholder participation in sustainability science and policy; and (c) innovation, perceived risk and behaviour change with respect to sustainable transport and consumption.

As well as lecturing in psychology at Cardiff, I am partner coordinator for the Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research and  an associate of the ESRC Centre for Business Relationships, Accountability, Sustainability & Society (BRASS) and the Sustainable Places Research Institute at Cardiff University. I am a member of the Climate Change Commission for Wales and DEFRA’s expert panel on Sustainable Consumption & Production.

Teaching Summary

Levels 1 and 2: I run social psychology practicals (PS2007), and give tutorials on psychological research, social, developmental and abnormal psychology (supporting PS1014, PS2007, PS2008, PS2011).

Level 3: My lectures in PS3415 (Environmental Psychology) cover environmental attitudes and behaviour, risk perception, risk communication, and recycling and climate change case studies. I supervise projects in environmental psychology.

Postgraduate: I give two lectures on the Postgraduate Research Design and Statistics module for research students. The first introduces students to philosophical, ethical and analytical issues in psychological research; the other focuses on conducting mixed-methods research.

Selected Publications (2008 onwards)

Poortinga, W., Spence, A., Whitmarsh, L., Capstick, S. & Pidgeon, N. (in press). Uncertain climate: An investigation into public scepticism about anthropogenic climate change. Global Environmental Change.

Whitmarsh, L. (2011). Scepticism and uncertainty about climate change: dimensions, determinants and change over time. Global Environmental Change, 21, 690–700. [pdf]

Whitmarsh, L., O’Neill, S. & Lorenzoni, I. (2011). Climate change or social change? Debate within, amongst, and beyond disciplines. Environment & Planning A, 43(2), 258 – 261. [pdf]

Whitmarsh, L., Seyfang, G. & O’Neill, S. (2011). Public Engagement with Carbon and Climate Change: To what extent is the public ‘carbon capable’? Global Environmental Change[pdf]

Whitmarsh, L., O’Neill, S. & Lorenzoni, I. (Eds) (2010). Engaging the public with climate change: behaviour change and communication. London: Earthscan. [pdf]

Whitmarsh, L. & O’Neill, S. (2010). Green identity, green living? The role of pro-environmental self-identity in determining consistency across diverse pro-environmental behaviours. Journal of Environmental Psychology, 30, 305–314.  [pdf]

Whitmarsh, L. & Köhler, J. (2010). Climate change and cars in the EU: the roles of auto firms, consumers, and policy in responding to global environmental change. Cambridge Journal of Regions, Economy and Society, 3(3), 427-442.  [pdf]

Köhler, J., Wietschel, M., Whitmarsh, L., Keles, D. & Schade, W. (2010). Infrastructure investment for a transition to Hydrogen automobiles. Technological Forecasting & Social Change, 77, 1237–1248.  [pdf]

Whitmarsh, L. & Lorenzoni, I. (2010). Behaviour, perceptions and communication of climate change. Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Climate Change, 1(2), 158-161. [pdf]

Nye, M., Whitmarsh, L. & Foxon, T. (2010). Socio-psychological perspectives on the active roles of domestic actors in transition to a lower carbon electricity economy. Environment & Planning A, 42(3), 697-714. [pdf]

Köhler, J., Whitmarsh, L., Nykvist, B., Schilperoord, M., Bergman, N. & Haxeltine, A. (2009). A transitions model for sustainable mobility. Ecological Economics, 68(12), 2985-2995. [pdf]

Whitmarsh, L. (2009). Book Review: ‘Public Participation in Environmental Assessment and Decision-Making, Panel on Public Participation in Environmental Assessment and Decision-Making’, Thomas Dietz and Paul C. Stern (Eds). Environmental Science & Policy, 12, 1069-1072. [pdf]

Whitmarsh, L., Swartling, Å. & Jäger, J. (2009). Participation of experts and non-experts in a sustainability assessment of mobility. Environmental Policy & Governance, 19, 232-250. [pdf]

Whitmarsh, L. (2009). Behavioural responses to climate change: Asymmetry of intentions and impacts. Journal of Environmental Psychology, 29, 13-23. [pdf]

Whitmarsh, L., Turnpenny, J. & Nykvist, B. (2009). Beyond the regime: can Integrated Sustainability Assessment address the barriers to effective sustainable mobility policy? Journal of Environmental Planning & Management, 52(8), 973-991.

Whitmarsh, L. (2009). What’s in a name? Commonalities and differences in public understanding of “climate change” and “global warming”. Public Understanding of Science, 18, 401–420. [pdf

Ockwell, D., Whitmarsh, L. & O’Neill, S. (2009). Reorienting climate change communication for effective mitigation – forcing people to be green or fostering grass-roots engagement? Science Communication, 30(3), 305-327. [pdf]

Nykvist, B. & Whitmarsh, L. (2008). A multi-level analysis of sustainable mobility transitions: Niche development in the UK and Sweden. Technological Forecasting & Social Change, 75, 1373–1387. [pdf]

Whitmarsh, L. (2008). Are flood victims more concerned about climate change than other people?  The role of direct experience in risk perception and behavioural response. Journal of Risk Research, 11(3), 351-374. [pdf]

Whitmarsh, L. & Nykvist, B. (2008). Integrated sustainability assessment of mobility transitions: Simulating stakeholders’ visions of and pathways to sustainable land-based mobility. International Journal of Innovation & Sustainable Development, 3(1-2), 115-127. [pdf]

Haxeltine, A., Whitmarsh, L., Rotmans, J., Köhler, J., Bergman, N. & Schilperoord, M. (2008). Conceptual framework for transition modelling. International Journal of Innovation & Sustainable Development, 3(1-2), 93-114. [pdf]

Bergman, N., Haxeltine, A., Whitmarsh, L., Köhler, J., Schilperoord, M. & Rotmans, J. (2008). Modelling socio-technical transition patterns and pathways. Journal of Artificial Societies & Social Simulation, 11(3)7. [pdf]

Whitmarsh, L. & Wietschel, M. (2008). Sustainable transport visions: What role for hydrogen and fuel cell vehicle technologies?  Energy and Environment, 19(2), 207-226. [pdf]

Publications

Online Publications

Click on my Researcher ID badge for electronic information about my publications:

Full List of Publications

Forthcoming

Whitmarsh, L. & Ockwell, D. (in prep.). Impact and durability of climate sceptical messaging: effects of counter-arguments, prior attitudes and values on persuasion.

Whitmarsh, L. (submitted). How useful is the Multi-Level Perspective for transport and sustainability research? Journal of Transport Geography.

Corner, A. Whitmarsh, L. & Xenias, D. (submitted). Uncertainty and attitudes towards climate change: biased assimilation but no polarisation. Climatic Change.

Poortinga, W., Spence, A., Whitmarsh, L., Capstick, S. & Pidgeon, N. (in press). Uncertain climate: An investigation into public scepticism about anthropogenic climate change. Global Environmental Change.

2011

Whitmarsh, L. (2011). Scepticism and uncertainty about climate change: dimensions, determinants and change over time. Global Environmental Change, 21, 690–700. [pdf]

Whitmarsh, L., O’Neill, S. & Lorenzoni, I. (2011). Climate change or social change? Debate within, amongst, and beyond disciplines. Environment & Planning A, 43(2), 258 – 261. [pdf]

Whitmarsh, L., Seyfang, G. & O’Neill, S. (2011). Public Engagement with Carbon and Climate Change: To what extent is the public ‘carbon capable’? Global Environmental Change[pdf]

2010

Whitmarsh, L., O’Neill, S. & Lorenzoni, I. (Eds) (2010). Engaging the public with climate change: behaviour change and communication. London: Earthscan. [pdf]

Whitmarsh, L. & O’Neill, S. (2010). Green identity, green living? The role of pro-environmental self-identity in determining consistency across diverse pro-environmental behaviours. Journal of Environmental Psychology, 30, 305–314.  [pdf]

Whitmarsh, L. & Köhler, J. (2010). Climate change and cars in the EU: the roles of auto firms, consumers, and policy in responding to global environmental change. Cambridge Journal of Regions, Economy and Society, 3(3), 427-442.  [pdf]

Köhler, J., Wietschel, M., Whitmarsh, L., Keles, D. & Schade, W. (2010). Infrastructure investment for a transition to Hydrogen automobiles. Technological Forecasting & Social Change, 77, 1237–1248.  [pdf]

Whitmarsh, L. & Lorenzoni, I. (2010). Behaviour, perceptions and communication of climate change. Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Climate Change, 1(2), 158-161. [pdf]

Nye, M., Whitmarsh, L. & Foxon, T. (2010). Socio-psychological perspectives on the active roles of domestic actors in transition to a lower carbon electricity economy. Environment & Planning A, 42(3), 697-714. [pdf]

Whitmarsh, L. & O’Neill, S. (2010). Introduction: Opportunities and limitations to engaging individuals with climate change and energy. In Whitmarsh, L., O’Neill, S. & Lorenzoni, I. (Eds). Engaging the public with climate change: behaviour change and communication. London: Earthscan.

Whitmarsh, L., O’Neill, S. & Lorenzoni, I. (2010). Conclusion: What have we learnt and where do we go from here? In Whitmarsh, L., O’Neill, S. & Lorenzoni, I. (Eds). Engaging the public with climate change: behaviour change and communication. London: Earthscan.

Höppner, C. & Whitmarsh, L. (2010). Public and policy expectations regarding public engagement in climate change action. In Whitmarsh, L., O’Neill, S. & Lorenzoni, I. (Eds). Engaging the public with climate change: behaviour change and communication. London: Earthscan.

Ockwell, D., Whitmarsh, L. & O’Neill, S. (2010). Behavioural insights: motivating individual emissions cuts through communication. In Lever-Tracey, C. (Ed). Routledge Handbook of Climate Change and Society. London: Routledge, pp341-150.

Whitmarsh, L. & Lorenzoni, I. (2010). Behaviour, perceptions and communication of climate change. Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Climate Change, 1(2), 158-161. [pdf]

Nye, M., Whitmarsh, L. & Foxon, T. (2010). Socio-psychological perspectives on the active roles of domestic actors in transition to a lower carbon electricity economy. Environment & Planning A, 42(3), 697-714. [pdf]

Climate Change Communication Advisory Group. (2010) Communicating climate change to mass public audiences. [pdf]

Ockwell, D., Whitmarsh, L. & O’Neill, S. (2010). Strong climate legislation and public behaviour change – the role of communication. Sussex Energy Group Policy Briefing No. 6. [pdf]

2009

Köhler, J., Whitmarsh, L., Nykvist, B., Schilperoord, M., Bergman, N. & Haxeltine, A. (2009). A transitions model for sustainable mobility. Ecological Economics, 68(12), 2985-2995. [pdf]

Whitmarsh, L. (2009). Book Review: ‘Public Participation in Environmental Assessment and Decision-Making, Panel on Public Participation in Environmental Assessment and Decision-Making’, Thomas Dietz and Paul C. Stern (Eds). Environmental Science & Policy, 12, 1069-1072. [pdf]

Whitmarsh, L., Swartling, Å. & Jäger, J. (2009). Participation of experts and non-experts in a sustainability assessment of mobility. Environmental Policy & Governance, 19, 232-250. [pdf]

Whitmarsh, L. (2009). Behavioural responses to climate change: Asymmetry of intentions and impacts. Journal of Environmental Psychology, 29, 13-23. [pdf]

Whitmarsh, L., Turnpenny, J. & Nykvist, B. (2009). Beyond the regime: can Integrated Sustainability Assessment address the barriers to effective sustainable mobility policy? Journal of Environmental Planning & Management, 52(8), 973-991.

Whitmarsh, L. (2009). What’s in a name? Commonalities and differences in public understanding of “climate change” and “global warming”. Public Understanding of Science, 18, 401–420. [pdf

Ockwell, D., Whitmarsh, L. & O’Neill, S. (2009). Reorienting climate change communication for effective mitigation – forcing people to be green or fostering grass-roots engagement? Science Communication, 30(3), 305-327. [pdf]

Whitmarsh, L., O’Neill, S., Seyfang, G. & Lorenzoni, I. (2009). Carbon Capability: what does it mean and how can we promote it? In Stibbe, A. (ed.) The Handbook of Sustainability Literacy. Totnes: Green Books Ltd. pp. 124-129.

Upham, P., Whitmarsh, L., Poortinga,W., Purdam, K., Darnton, A., McLachlan, C. & Devine-Wright, P. (2009) Public Attitudes to Environmental Change: a selective review of theory and practice. A research synthesis for the Living with Environmental Change Programme, Research Councils UK. [pdf]

Whitmarsh, L., O’Neill, S., Seyfang, G. & Lorenzoni, I. (2009). Carbon Capability: what does it mean, how prevalent is it, and how can we promote it? Tyndall Centre Working Paper No. 132. 

Carney, S., Whitmarsh, L., Nicholson-Cole, S. & Shackley, S. (2009). A Dynamic Typology of Stakeholder Engagement within Climate Change Research. Tyndall Centre Working Paper No. 128. 

2008

Nykvist, B. & Whitmarsh, L. (2008). A multi-level analysis of sustainable mobility transitions: Niche development in the UK and Sweden. Technological Forecasting & Social Change, 75, 1373–1387. [pdf]

Whitmarsh, L. (2008). Are flood victims more concerned about climate change than other people?  The role of direct experience in risk perception and behavioural response. Journal of Risk Research, 11(3), 351-374. [pdf]

Whitmarsh, L. & Nykvist, B. (2008). Integrated sustainability assessment of mobility transitions: Simulating stakeholders’ visions of and pathways to sustainable land-based mobility. International Journal of Innovation & Sustainable Development, 3(1-2), 115-127. [pdf]

Haxeltine, A., Whitmarsh, L., Rotmans, J., Köhler, J., Bergman, N. & Schilperoord, M. (2008). Conceptual framework for transition modelling. International Journal of Innovation & Sustainable Development, 3(1-2), 93-114. [pdf]

Bergman, N., Haxeltine, A., Whitmarsh, L., Köhler, J., Schilperoord, M. & Rotmans, J. (2008). Modelling socio-technical transition patterns and pathways. Journal of Artificial Societies & Social Simulation, 11(3)7. [pdf]

Whitmarsh, L. & Wietschel, M. (2008). Sustainable transport visions: What role for hydrogen and fuel cell vehicle technologies?  Energy and Environment, 19(2), 207-226. [pdf]

Köhler, J., Whitmarsh, L., Michie, J. & Oughton, C. (2008). Can car makers save the planet?  In Foxon, T., Köhler, J. & Oughton, C. (eds.). Innovation for a Low Carbon Economy: Economic, Institutional and Management Approaches. Cheltenham: Edward Elgar. pp. 230-272.

Whitmarsh, L. (2008). Carbon offsetting - a way of avoiding emissions reductions?  Environment Research Web. Nov 5th.[Link]

Nicholson-Cole, S. & Whitmarsh, L. (2008). Researching with stakeholders: Lessons from interdisciplinary climate change research. Tyndall Briefing Note No. 32. [pdf]

Bergman, N., Whitmarsh, L. & Köhler, J. (2008). Transition to sustainable development in the UK housing sector: from case study to model implementation. UEA: Tyndall Centre Working Paper No. 120. [pdf]

2007

Lorenzoni, I., Nicholson-Cole, S., & Whitmarsh, L. (2007). Barriers perceived to engaging with climate change among the UK public and their policy implications. Global Environmental Change, 17(3-4), 445-459.

Whitmarsh, L., Bohunovsky, L., Jäger, J., & Nykvist, B. (2007). Stakeholder Feedback on MATISSE Sustainable Hydrogen Visions and Pathways: Findings from the June 2007 Hydrogen Stakeholder Workshop. SERI: MATISSE Working Paper 18.  [pdf]

Whitmarsh, L., Jäger, J., Nykvist, B., Schade, W., Seydel, P., Strasser, S., et al. (2007). Stakeholder Feedback on MATISSE Sustainable Hydrogen Scope and Visions: Findings from the February 2006 Hydrogen Stakeholder Workshop. SERI: MATISSE Working Paper 17.  [pdf]

Whitmarsh, L. (2007). Citizens’ workshops on sustainable futures: Report of findings. MATISSE Working Paper No. 14. Vienna: SERI. [pdf]

2006

Nykvist, B. & Whitmarsh, L. (2006). Identifying opportunities and pathways for transitions to sustainable transport in Sweden and the UK.  MATISSE Working Paper No. 7. Vienna: SERI. [pdf

Whitmarsh, L., Köhler, J., Bergman, N., Haxeltine, A., Nykvist, B., Wietschel, M. (2006). Modelling and assessing transition pathways to a hydrogen society. MATISSE Working Paper No. 3. Vienna: SERI. [pdf

Whitmarsh, L., Wietschel, M. (2006). Sustainable transport visions: What role for hydrogen and fuel cell vehicles technologies?  MATISSE Working Paper No. 2. Vienna: SERI. [pdf]

2005

Whitmarsh, L. (2005). The benefits of guide dog ownership. Visual Impairment Research, 7(1), 27-42. doi: 10.1080/13882350590956439

Whitmarsh, L., Kean, S., Russell, C., Peacock, M. & Haste, H. (2005). Connecting Science: what we know and what we don’t know about science in society. London: British Association for the Advancement of Science. [pdf

2004

Whitmarsh, L. (2004). Ignoring climate change.  Science & Public Affairs, June, p.24.

2000

Charlton, T., Panting, C., Davie, R., Coles, D., & Whitmarsh, L. (2000). Children's playground behaviour across five years of broadcast television: A naturalistic study in a remote community. Emotional and Behavioural Difficulties, 5(4), 4-12.

© Copyright
Some of the documents listed above are available for downloading. These have been provided as a means to ensure timely dissemination of scholarly and technical work on a non-commercial basis. Copyright and all rights therein are maintained by the authors or by other copyright holders, notwithstanding that they have offered their works here electronically. It is understood that all persons copying this information will adhere to the terms and constraints invoked by each author's copyright. These works may not be re-posted without the explicit permission of the copyright holder.

Media

Media Activities

In 2011, I participated in several Science Café programmes on BBC Radio Wales discussing climate change and nuclear risk perceptions and was interviewed for the Guardian about green behaviour and the government’s Green Deal. Other interviews over the last couple of years include for the Guardian on climate change perceptions, the BBC on public attitudes to climate change, the Times Higher Education Supplement on communicating climate change, and the Express on avoiding fear to communicate climate change.

My research on climate change scepticism received considerable media coverage during 2009. The findings (published in Global Environmental Change in 2011) revealed a doubling of the proportion of the public agreeing that "claims that human activities are changing the climate are exaggerated" between 2003 and 2008 (see Figure).  For example, the BBC, Financial Times, Independent, Express and ABC reported the rise.

This YouTube video describes recent work on green behaviours and how to encourage green lifestyle change.

Research

Research Topics

Public engagement with climate change and low-carbon lifestyles:
This strand of research stems from my PhD, which examined public perceptions of, and behavioural responses to, climate change in flood-prone regions in the South of England. I particularly focussed on the roles of language and experience in how people understood and responded to climate change.

Since this time, I have worked with other researchers at the Tyndall Centre for Climate Change on: perceived barriers to engaging with climate change; motivations for, and for not, purchasing carbon offsets; the links between different environmentally-significant behaviours, including whether pro-environmental self-identity predicts spill-over effects between behaviours; and attitudes to climate change (particularly focussing on uncertainty and scepticism). Data collection from UK residents has been via a postal survey and an online survey. My current research (with Adam Corner and Dimitrios Xenias) uses experiments to investigate how uncertain information about climate change is perceived and interpreted, and how prior attitudes and values influence this interpretation.

With Irene Lorenzoni (East Anglia) and Saffron O’Neill (Melbourne), I edited a book on Engaging the public with climate change: behaviour change and communication which was published by Earthscan in November 2010. This interdisciplinary volume features contributions from academics and practitioners involved in communicating climate change and encouraging low-carbon lifestyles.

In addition, I have received funding (on a consultancy basis) from DEFRA for several projects on pro-environmental attitudes and behaviour change. This includes two projects investigating the effectiveness of different approaches (informational, social, financial and structural) to encouraging energy-efficient behaviour change amongst students and staff within Higher Education; and a literature review and workshop on breaking and creating habits for sustainability. In addition, in 2009, I contributed to a major research synthesis on Public Attitudes to Environmental Change funded under the Living with Environmental Change cross-council research programme and am recently led a similar review for the RCUK’s Energy Programme on Public Attitudes to Low-Carbon Energy.


Within this research strand, I am also interested in testing novel ways of engaging the public with climate change. In 2009, I received funding from the RCUK Beacons for Public Engagement to work with a sustainable design expert (Elio Studios) and researchers at the University of East Anglia to produce creative installations of climate change data. These were unveiled at the Sustainable Living Festival at The Forum, Norwich, UK in May 2009. In another project (with David Ockwell, Sussex; and Saffron O’Neill, Melbourne), funded by the Science & Policy Research Unit, University of Sussex, we are investigating whether participating in creative writing about climate change increases interest and concern about climate change, and willingness to change environmentally-significant behaviour.

Public/stakeholder participation in sustainability science and policy:
Within three European (FP6 and FP7) projects, ADAM, MATISSE and REACT, I have been involved in developing participatory methods and tools to enable the public and other stakeholders to deliberate over policies and novel technologies and, ultimately, contribute to decision-making about science and policy.

Much of this work was conducted through the MATISSE project (Methods and Tools for Integrated Sustainability Assessment) between 2005 and 2008. The project aimed to advance the science and application of Integrated Sustainability Assessment (ISA) in EU policy-making by improving the tool-kit and methods available for developing and assessing sustainability policies. This work focussed on developing participatory methods and modelling tools to support strategic decision-making in respect of sustainability issues, such as transport and consumption. Literature reviews and stakeholder engagement methods (including expert and citizen focus groups and questionnaires) were used to develop ‘visions’ and ‘pathways’ for sustainable futures in each case study (transport, consumption, water management).

At a more local level, I was also involved in the Sense of Place project, funded by Norfolk Rural Community Council in 2007, which aimed to enable communities to become familiar with, and to influence, environmental issues, including landscape, ecological networks, green space, recreation and climate change. The project focussed on the design (in collaboration with various stakeholder groups) and delivery of a web-based decision-support toolkit.

Innovation, risk and behaviour change with respect to sustainable transport:
In the current FP7 REACT (Supporting Research on Climate-friendly Transport) project I am working on (with Dimitrios Xenias), we aim: to build networks and identify synergies in low-carbon transport research initiatives; to help shape the strategic direction of low-carbon transport research and development within Europe; to contribute to improving coordination between the European, national, regional and private research and development actions; and to help ensure knowledge about low-carbon transport is available and accessible for those who require it.

Dimitrios and I are also investigating the acceptability of different transport technologies and policies, and the factors affecting low-carbon transport behaviours. This research compares different methodologies for eliciting preferences, including deliberative workshops, paired preference and ranking exercises.


Funding

NERC/UKERC (2010-12). Transforming the UK Energy System: Public Values, Attitudes and Acceptability. Pidgeon, N., Pearson, P. Spence, A., Parkhill, K., Butler, C, Whitmarsh, L., Sweet, T., Chaudry, M., & Jenkins, N.

RCUK (2010). Public Attitudes to Low-Carbon Energy - Research Synthesis. Whitmarsh, L., Upham, P. (Manchester), Poortinga, W. (Cardiff), Darnton, A. (AD Research & Analysis), McLachlan, C. (Manchester), Devine-Wright, P. (Exeter), & Sherry-Brennan, F. (Exeter) [pdf]

NERC/ESRC (2010-2013). PhD Studentship. Public Perception of Habitat Management Strategies for the Freshwater Pearl Mussel in Response to Climate-Driven Environmental Change across Wales. Ormerod, S., Constantine, J. & Whitmarsh, L.

British Psychological Society. (2009-11). Psychology and Sustainability. BPS Research Seminars Competition. Whitmarsh, L., Pidgeon, N., Spence, A., Rabinovich, A. (Exeter) & Uzzell, D. (Surrey)

European Commission (Support Action - Framework Programme 7) (2009-11). Supporting REseArch on Climate-friendly Transport (REACT). Roze, R. (Coventry University Enterprises), Rudolph, F. (Wuppertal Institute), Stylianidis,, S. (GeoImaging), Vitale, A.., Tavlaki, E. (Arachni), Radmilović, Z.., Cisic, D.. (Rijeka), Whitmarsh, L. & Špirić, Z..

ESRC. (2009-10). Living With Environmental Change (LWEC) Research Synthesis. A review of public attitudes to environmental change. Upham, P. (Manchester), Whitmarsh, L., Poortinga, W., Purdam, K. (Manchester), Darnton, A. (AD Research & Analysis), & Devine-Wright, P. (Exeter)

Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research. (2008-10). Carbon Offsetting and Pro-environmental Behaviour. Whitmarsh, L.

In addition, I have received funding (on a consultancy basis) from WAG and from DEFRA for several projects on pro-environmental behaviour change, through their Greener Living Fund and Action-Based Research fund.

Research Groups/Networks

Understanding Risk Group
ESRC Centre for Business Relationships, Accountability, Sustainability & Society (BRASS)
Sustainable Places Research Institute
Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research

Climate Change Consortium of Wales (C3W)

Research Collaborators

Dimitrios Xenias (Post-doctoral researcher; REACT project)

Nick Pidgeon and Understanding Risk group Climate Change Consortium for Wales; URI Sustainable Places; BPS Seminar Series; LWEC research synthesis; WAG segmentation research; research on perceptions of climate change and environmental behaviour

Saffron O’Neill (Melbourne) research on perceptions of climate change

Irene Lorenzoni (East Anglia) research on perceptions of climate change; co-editing WIREs Climate Change

David Ockwell (Surrey) research on engaging with climate change

Bas Verplanken (Bath) and Lizzie Bone (NUS) research on pro-environmental behaviour and breaking/creating habits

Andrew Darnton (AD Research & Analysis) research on pro-environmental behaviour and breaking/creating habits

Postgraduate Students

Postgraduate Research Interests

I am interested in the psychological and social dimensions of environmental, risk and sustainability issues. My research, which employs both quantitative and qualitative methods of data collection and analysis, focuses on three main areas: (a) public engagement with climate change, carbon literacy, carbon offsetting, and low-carbon lifestyles; (b) public/stakeholder participation in sustainability science and policy; and (c) innovation and behaviour change with respect to sustainable transport and consumption.

If you are interested in applying for a PhD, or for further information regarding my postgraduate research, please contact me directly (contact details available on the 'Overview' page), or submit a formal application here.

Current Students

Po-Han Hsu (University of East Anglia; Jointly supervised with Irene Lorenzoni and Peter Simmons) Po-Han’s research examines the ways in which new media influences perceptions, group dynamics and behaviours in relation to energy use and climate change.

Merryn Thomas (jointly supervised with Nick Pidgeon and Rhoda Ballinger, EARTH). Merryn’s research focuses on public perceptions of sea-level rise risk within the Severn Estuary.

Kate Walker (jointly supervised with Jose Constantine, EARTH, and Steve Ormerod, BIO). Kate’s research focuses on public perception of habitat management strategies for the freshwater pearl mussel in response to climate-driven environmental change.

Daniel Wheelock

Biography

Undergraduate Education

1997: BA Hons (2.1) Theology and Religious Studies with French, University of Kent

Postgraduate Education

2010: Postgraduate Certificate in University Teaching & Learning, Cardiff University

2000: MSc (Distinction) Science, Culture & Communication, University of Bath

2005: PhD Psychology (‘Public Understanding of and Response to Climate Change’), University of Bath

Awards/Other Duties

Best Conference Paper Award at the International Conference on Whole Life Urban Sustainability and its Assessment in Glasgow, 2007

Member of the Climate Change Commission for Wales

Member of the British Science Association Committee on Science & Society 

Member of DEFRA expert panel on Sustainable Consumption & Production (SCP)

Member of the Living with Environmental Change (LWEC) Public Engagement Strategic Advisory Group

Member of the International Association for People-Environment Studies (IAPS)

Reviewer for: Nature Climate Change; Risk Analysis; Journal of Environmental Psychology; Environment & Behavior; British Journal of Social Psychology; Journal of Applied Social Psychology; Global Environmental Change; Climate Policy; Ecological Economics; Energy & Environment; Energy Policy; Environment & Planning A; Environmental Health; Environmental Politics; Ethics & International Affairs; GeoForum; International Journal of Sustainable Development; Journal of Cleaner Production; Population & Environment; Perspectives in Public Health; PLoS ONE; Technological Forecasting & Social Change; Society & Natural Resources; Sustainability: Science, Practice, and Policy; Area; St Antony’s International Review; Taylor & Francis books; John Wiley & Sons; European Communication Research & Education Association; Sage Publications; Government Office for Science (Foresight); Behavioural Insights Team (Cabinet Office)

Editorial board: Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews (WIREs) Climate Change: 

PhD examining: Exeter University, Queensland University of Technology

Grant reviewing: NSF, ESRC, NERC, Austrian Science Fund FWF, Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO); Leverhulme Trust

Employment

2009-present: Lecturer – School of Psychology, Cardiff University.
2009-present: Visiting Fellow/Partner Coordinator – Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research. 
2009-present: Research Associate – ESRC Centre for Business Relationships, Accountability, Sustainability & Society (BRASS) and (since 2010) Sustainable Places Research Institute
2009-present: Visiting Fellow – Science Studies Centre, School of Psychology, University of Bath
2005-2009: Senior Research Associate – Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research, School of Environmental Sciences, University of East Anglia
2001-2004: Teaching Assistant / Lecturer (part-time) – Department of Psychology, University of Bath
2000-2001: Research Officer – Guide Dogs for the Blind Association, Burghfield, Reading