Behavioral Decision Research in Environmental Policy

While climate change may be one of the most daunting and significant crises of this century, the threat is not yet perceived as an urgent one by many. Meanwhile, the cost of recommended actions to address climate change are immediate and very concrete, leading people to want to shy away from acting. Behavioral decision research can help us understand both the challenges in altering the status quo, as well as the best approaches for effecting change on individual and societal levels.

Psychology, economics, and other social sciences play an important role in the study of decision-making related to the environment, ranging from individual choices to broader collective attitudes and behaviors. While a number of models regarding human behavior rely on assumptions about rational choice, there is a broader range of factors that influence people to act in different ways (social/cultural norms, religious beliefs, hopes and fears, differing risk tolerance, etc.). Understanding the full range of these motivations and processes is vital to developing effective policies.

Behavioral research can help us predict human action and choices in the face of uncertainty and understand how to motivate more sustainable outcomes in resource utilization, conservation, or other results of climate adaptation decisions. It may help us identify the most promising strategies for effecting change, such as using social influence, making sustainable choices the default options, or reframing messaging to use language that is more appealing or less polarizing. Our researchers are also studying the process of scientific assessment, the differences between the public’s understanding of environmental challenges compared to scientific understanding, and strategies for more effectively communicating scientific research to inform policy.

Related News

Michael Oppenheimer Writes Chapter in Greta Thunberg’s New Book
Nov. 16, 2022
Author
Written by Molly Seltzer, Office of Communications
Carbon Dioxide Emissions More Costly to Society Than Previously Thought
Sept. 1, 2022
Author
Written by Resources for the Future, with Keely Swan, C-PREE
Fighting Climate Change is Wildly Popular, but Most Americans Don’t Know that Other People Feel the Same Way
Aug. 24, 2022
Author
Written by Molly Seltzer, Andlinger Center for Energy and the Environment
Tackling Climate Change’s Most Complex Phenomena
Nov. 9, 2021
Author
Written by Riis L. Williams
Princeton voices: Speaking out on climate change, heat waves, wildfires and more
Aug. 10, 2021
Author
Written by Liz Fuller-Wright, Office of Communications
Americans are Unaware of Carbon Capture and Sequestration Technology, According to a New Study
June 15, 2021
Author
Written by Molly Seltzer, Andlinger Center for Energy and the Environment
In Calculating the Social Cost of Methane, Equity Matters
April 22, 2021
Author
Written by Julie Chao, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, and Keely Swan, C-PREE
Climate Change “Winners” May Owe Financial Compensation to Polluters
March 2, 2021
Author
Written by Keely Swan, Center for Policy Research on Energy and the Environment

Related People

Haley N. Anderson
Maya Chung
HMEI-STEP Fellow 2022
Sara Constantino
Visiting Research Scholar
Janet Currie
Henry Putnam Professor of Economics and Public Affairs
Sabrina Fields
Robert O. Keohane
Professor of International Affairs, Emeritus
Melissa Lane
Class of 1943 Professor of Politics
Jeffrey Lees
Associate Research Scholar
Pooja Ramamurthi
STEP Ph.D. Student
Matthew Sisco
Postdoctoral Research Associate
Calvin Spanbauer
STEP PhD Student
Melissa O. Tier
STEP Ph.D. Student