Academic Papers

 
  1. Albrecht, G., Sartore, G. M., Connor, L., Higginbotham, N., Freeman, S., Kelly, B. & Pollard, G. (2007). Solastalgia: the distress caused by environmental change. Australasian psychiatry, 15(sup1), S95-S98.

  2. American Imago: Special Issue on Climate Change and Grief. Vol. 77, No. 1. 2020.

  3. Alston, M. (2015). Social work, climate change and global cooperation. International Social Work, 58(3), 355-363.

  4. Baker, J. (2013) What have we done to mother earth? Psychodynamic thinking applied to our current world crisis. Psychodynamic Practice, 19(1): 55-67.

  5. Bednarek, S. (2018) “How wide is the field? Gestalt therapy, capitalism and the natural world.” Brit. Gestalt Journal, 27(2): 8-17.

  6. Bellamy, A. (2019) “Trauma, fragmentation and narrative: Sandor Ferenczi's relevance for psychoanalytical perspectives on our response to climate change and environmental destruction.” Int. J. Applied Psa Studies, 16(2).

  7. Berry, H, Bowen, K and Kjellstrom, T. (2010). Climate change and mental health: a causal pathways framework. International Journal of Public Health. [Online]. 55, pp123-132.

  8. Berry, H. L., Waite, T. D., Dear, K. B., Capon, A. G., & Murray, V. (2018). The case for systems thinking about climate change and mental health. Nature Climate Change, 8(4), 282.

  9. Bigda-Peyton, F. (2004). “When Drives Are Dangerous: Drive Theory and Resource Overconsumption.” Modern Psychoanalysis, 29(2):251-270.

  10. Bodnar, S. (2008) “Wasted and Bombed: Clinical Enactments of a Changing Relationship to the Earth.” Psychoanalytic Dialogues, 18:484–512.

  11. Clayton, S., C. Manning, K. Krygsman, and M. Speiser (2017). “Mental Health and Our Changing Climate: Impacts, Implications, and Guidance.” American Psychological Association, March, 2017.

  12. Cunsolo, A, and N Ellis (2018). Ecological grief as a mental health response to climate change-related loss. Nature Climate Change, April 2018.

  13. Dodds, J. (2013) “Minding the Ecological Body: Neuropsychoanalysis and Ecopsychoanalysis.” Front Psychol. 24: 125.

  14. Dodds, J. & Jordan, M. (2012) “What is Ecopsychoanalysis?” Available at www.ecopsychoanalysis.blogspot.com.

  15. Ebi, K. L., Berry, P., Hayes, K., Boyer, C., Sellers, S., Enright, P. M., & Hess, J. J. (2018). Stress Testing the Capacity of Health Systems to Manage Climate Change-Related Shocks and Stresses. International journal of environmental research and public health, 15(11), 2370.

  16. Gifford, R. (2011) “The Dragons of Inaction : Psychological Barriers That Limit Climate Change Mitigation and Adaptation.” American Psychologist. Vol. 66. (4): 290-302.

  17. Hamilton, Jo. “Emotions, Reflexivity and the Long Haul: What We Do About How We Feel About Climate Change.” in the book, Climate Psychology (ed. P Hoggett). pp 153-175

  18. Hayes, K., Blashki, G., Wiseman, J., Burke, S., & Reifels, L. (2018). Climate change and mental health: risks, impacts and priority actions. International journal of mental health systems, 12(1), 28.

  19. Hayes, K., & Poland, B. (2018). Addressing Mental Health in a Changing Climate: Incorporating Mental Health Indicators into Climate Change and Health Vulnerability and Adaptation Assessments. International journal of environmental research and public health, 15(9), 1806. doi:10.3390/ijerph15091806

  20. Hunter, E. (2009). ‘Radical hope’ and rain: Climate change and the mental health of indigenous residents of northern Australia. Australasian Psychiatry. [Online]. 17(6), pp 445-452.

  21. Int. J. Applied Psychoanalytic Studies. Special Issue on Climate Change, Brenner, I. and Brenner, L., Eds. (2019) Vol. 16 (2).

  22. Jordan, M. (2009). Nature and self—An ambivalent attachment?. Ecopsychology, 1(1), 26-31. Kassouf, S. (2017). Psychoanalysis and climate change: Revisiting Searles’ The Nonhuman Environment, rediscovering Freud’s phylogenetic fantasy, and imagining a future. American Imago, 74(2), 141-171.

  23. Kiehl, J. (2012). A Jungian perspective on global warming. Ecopsychology, 4(3): 187-192.

  24. Ley, W. (2008) The ecological dimension of psychoanalysis and the concept of sustainability. J. Amer. Psychoanalytic Assoc., 56(4) 1279-1307.

  25. Kaijser, A & Kronsell, A. (2014). Climate change through the lens of intersectionality. Environmental politics, 23(3), 417-433.

  26. Obradovich, N., Migliorini, R., Paulus, M. P., & Rahwan, I. (2018). Empirical evidence of mental health risks posed by climate change. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 115(43), 10953-10958.

  27. Ojala, M. (2012). How do children cope with global climate change? Coping strategies, engagement, and well-being. Journal of Environmental Psychology32(3), 225-233.

  28. Ojala, M. (2013). Coping with climate change among adolescents: Implications for subjective well-being and environmental engagement. Sustainability5(5), 2191-2209.

  29. Mishan, J. (1996). Psychoanalysis and environmentalism: First thoughts. Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy, 10 (1): 59-70.

  30. Morton, T (2015) Introducing the idea of Hyperobjects. High Country News.

    https://www.hcn.org/issues/47.1/introducing-the-idea-of-hyperobjects.

  31. Plesa, P. (2019). A theoretical foundation for ecopsychology: Looking at ecofeminist epistemology. New Ideas in Psychology, 52, 18-25.

  32. Randall, R. (2009). Loss and climate change: The cost of parallel narratives. Ecopsychology, 1(3), 118-128.

  33. Rice, S & McIver, L (2016). Climate change and mental health: Rationale for research and intervention planning. Asian Journal of Psychiatry. [Online]. 20, pp1-2.

  34. Rust, M. J. (2008). Climate on the couch: unconscious processes in relation to our environmental crisis. Psychotherapy and Politics International, 6(3), 157-170.

  35. Saxton, M. L., & Ghenis, A. (2018). Disability Inclusion in Climate Change: Impacts and Intersections. Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Equality and Diversity, 4(1).

  36. Searle, K., & Gow, K. (2010). Do concerns about climate change lead to distress?. International Journal of Climate Change Strategies and Management2(4), 362-379.

  37. Searles, H. (1972). Unconscious processes in relation to the environmental crisis. The Psychoanalytic Review, 59 (3), 361-374.

  38. Sjodin, C. (2010) Psychoanalytic reflections on global warming and its relation to human omnipotence and ethical responsibility. Int. Forum of Psychoanalysis, 19:78-83.

  39. Spitzform, M. (2000). The ecological self: Metaphor and developmental experience? J. Appl. Psychoanalytic Studies, 2(3): 265-285

  40. Stanley, S. K., & Wilson, M. S. (2018). Meta-analysing the association between social dominance orientation, authoritarianism, and attitudes on the environment and climate change. Journal of Environmental Psychology.

  41. Torres, J and Casey, J (2017). The centrality of social ties to climate migration and mental health. BMC Public Health.

  42. Whitmore-Williams, S, Manning, C, Krygsman, K and Speiser, M. (2017). Mental Health and our Changing Climate. [Online]. Washington DC: American Psychological Association.

  43. Woodbury, Z (2019). Climate Trauma: Toward a New Taxonomy of Trauma. Ecopsychology11(1), 1-8.

  44. “The Psychological Impacts of Global Climate Change” American Psychologist. 66(4): 265-276.