1 hr 18 min

The Secret of How Individual Actions Lead To Tipping Points, Professor Jan Willem Bolderdijk Ep27 How to Save the World | The Psychology & Science of Environmental Behavior

    • Earth Sciences

Do individual behaviors make a difference?
We are often asked to take personal action to help the planet like eating less meat and riding more bikes—but many decree individual behavior as limited and naive in the face of powerful companies and governments. So, how does mass change really come about? There’s more to it than a simple individual-vs-system dichotomy.
The core mechanism of how change unfolds through societies is by people — our sensitivities to groups, perceptions, trends, and imitation and the social trends that are passed from human to human that lead to bigger systems changes such as laws, taxes, technologies, and urban design, are carried on the back of human behaviors.
Jan Willem Bolderdijk is an associate professor and researcher at the University of Groningen in the Netherlands. He studies how small groups of people influence bigger systems with respect to sustainability and climate change.
Jan's research papers here:

Minority influence in climate change mitigation

“How do you know someone's vegan?” They won't always tell you. An empirical test of the do-gooder's dilemma

Why going green feels good



How to Save the World is a Podcast About the Psychology of What Gets People To Take On Sustainable Behavior and Climate Action.

Environmental engineer, designer, and author, Katie Patrick, hunts down the latest behavioral science literature from top universities such as Harvard, MIT, and Stanford to unearth the evidence-based teachings you can use to get magnitudes more people to adopt your environmental campaign, program, or product. Sign up for Katie's free behavior and gamification design course at katiepatrick.com

Get a copy of How to Save the World on Amazon

This podcast is supported by our friends at Earth Hacks who run environmental hackathons, Conservation X Labs who promote community-driven open tech development for conservation, and Climate Designers - a network of designers who use their creative skills for climate action. You might enjoy joining their communities and events.

Contribute a monthly donation at patreon.com/katiepatrick to help me continue to make these episodes possible. Thank you to Jordan, Nader, Mike, Gary, Alex, Ben, Dee, and Ian for contributing! Xx

Follow on Twitter @katiepatrick, Instagram @katiepatrickhello, and LinkedIn



Book a 90-minute idea-storming call with me: https://buy.stripe.com/8wM8yS92c0mg1q07ss


---

Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/katiepatrick/message

Do individual behaviors make a difference?
We are often asked to take personal action to help the planet like eating less meat and riding more bikes—but many decree individual behavior as limited and naive in the face of powerful companies and governments. So, how does mass change really come about? There’s more to it than a simple individual-vs-system dichotomy.
The core mechanism of how change unfolds through societies is by people — our sensitivities to groups, perceptions, trends, and imitation and the social trends that are passed from human to human that lead to bigger systems changes such as laws, taxes, technologies, and urban design, are carried on the back of human behaviors.
Jan Willem Bolderdijk is an associate professor and researcher at the University of Groningen in the Netherlands. He studies how small groups of people influence bigger systems with respect to sustainability and climate change.
Jan's research papers here:

Minority influence in climate change mitigation

“How do you know someone's vegan?” They won't always tell you. An empirical test of the do-gooder's dilemma

Why going green feels good



How to Save the World is a Podcast About the Psychology of What Gets People To Take On Sustainable Behavior and Climate Action.

Environmental engineer, designer, and author, Katie Patrick, hunts down the latest behavioral science literature from top universities such as Harvard, MIT, and Stanford to unearth the evidence-based teachings you can use to get magnitudes more people to adopt your environmental campaign, program, or product. Sign up for Katie's free behavior and gamification design course at katiepatrick.com

Get a copy of How to Save the World on Amazon

This podcast is supported by our friends at Earth Hacks who run environmental hackathons, Conservation X Labs who promote community-driven open tech development for conservation, and Climate Designers - a network of designers who use their creative skills for climate action. You might enjoy joining their communities and events.

Contribute a monthly donation at patreon.com/katiepatrick to help me continue to make these episodes possible. Thank you to Jordan, Nader, Mike, Gary, Alex, Ben, Dee, and Ian for contributing! Xx

Follow on Twitter @katiepatrick, Instagram @katiepatrickhello, and LinkedIn



Book a 90-minute idea-storming call with me: https://buy.stripe.com/8wM8yS92c0mg1q07ss


---

Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/katiepatrick/message

1 hr 18 min