World Psychology
Vol. 4 No. 3 (2025)

“SOLASTALGIA” AND ECO-ANXIETY IN THE GLOBAL SOUTH: A COMMUNITY-BASED STUDY ON PSYCHOLOGICAL ADAPTATION TO CLIMATE CHANGE

Maarif, Mohammad Syamsul (Unknown)
Lee, Ava (Unknown)
Iqbal, Kiran (Unknown)



Article Info

Publish Date
02 Dec 2025

Abstract

Psychological research on climate change, dominated by Global North “eco-anxiety,” fails to capture the lived reality of the Global South. This ethnocentric bias overlooks the profound, place-based distress experienced by frontline communities facing immediate environmental degradation. This study aimed to investigate the manifestations of solastalgia and eco-anxiety and identify indigenous psychological adaptation strategies using a community-based participatory approach in the Global South. A Community-Based Participatory Research (CBPR) framework, employing a sequential explanatory mixed-methods design, was implemented in two climate-vulnerable sites (coastal Southeast Asia and agrarian Sahel, N=804). Qualitative methods informed the co-development of the Community Climate Distress and Resilience Scale (CCD-RS). Findings revealed that “solastalgia” (present-tense, place-based grief) is the dominant psychological burden, significantly superseding future-oriented ‘eco-anxiety’. Qualitative analysis identified local idioms of distress (e.g., “the sea is tired”). Resilience was not an individual trait but a collective process, strongly predicted by involvement in community rituals (\beta = .31, p < .001). The study provides an empirical corrective to the ethnocentric bias in climate psychology, demonstrating that psychological adaptation in the Global South is collective and place-based.

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Journal Info

Abbrev

wp

Publisher

Subject

Education Social Sciences Other

Description

Journal World Psychology is an open-access and peer-reviewed journal dedicated to publishing novel research in the field of psychology. Details on our focus and scope can be viewed here. World Psychology is published three times a year April, August, December and accepts current research articles ...