TY - JOUR
T1 - Red, White, and Blue
T2 - Environmental Distress among Water Stakeholders in a U.S. Farming Community
AU - DU BRAY, Margaret V.
AU - Quimby, Barbara
AU - Bausch, Julia C.
AU - Wutich, Amber
AU - Eaton, Weston M.
AU - Brasier, Kathryn J.
AU - Brewis, Alexandra
AU - Williams, Clinton
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 American Meteorological Society.
PY - 2022/1
Y1 - 2022/1
N2 - This paper explores environmental distress (e.g., feeling blue) in a politically conservative (“red”) and pre-dominantly white farming community in the southwestern United States. In such communities across the United States, expressed concern over environmental change-including climate change-tends to be lower. This is understood to have a palliative effect that reduces feelings of ecoanxiety. Using an emotional geographies framework, our study identifies the forms of everyday emotional expressions related to water and environmental change in the context of a vulnerable rural agricultural community in central Arizona. Drawing on long-term participant-observation and stakeholder research, we use data from individual (n = 48) and group (n = 8) interviews with water stakeholders to explore reports of sadness and fear over environmental change using an emotion-focused text analysis. We find that this distress is related to social and material changes related to environmental change rather than to environmental change itself. We discuss implications for research on emotional geographies for understanding reactions to environmental change and uncertainty.
AB - This paper explores environmental distress (e.g., feeling blue) in a politically conservative (“red”) and pre-dominantly white farming community in the southwestern United States. In such communities across the United States, expressed concern over environmental change-including climate change-tends to be lower. This is understood to have a palliative effect that reduces feelings of ecoanxiety. Using an emotional geographies framework, our study identifies the forms of everyday emotional expressions related to water and environmental change in the context of a vulnerable rural agricultural community in central Arizona. Drawing on long-term participant-observation and stakeholder research, we use data from individual (n = 48) and group (n = 8) interviews with water stakeholders to explore reports of sadness and fear over environmental change using an emotion-focused text analysis. We find that this distress is related to social and material changes related to environmental change rather than to environmental change itself. We discuss implications for research on emotional geographies for understanding reactions to environmental change and uncertainty.
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U2 - 10.1175/WCAS-D-21-0103.1
DO - 10.1175/WCAS-D-21-0103.1
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85137279777
SN - 1948-8327
VL - 14
SP - 585
EP - 595
JO - Weather, Climate, and Society
JF - Weather, Climate, and Society
IS - 2
ER -