“…Mental health fields (i.e., psychology, counseling, and social work) have made relevant contributions to research and policy on climate change and environmentalism (Clayton & Manning, 2018; Erickson, 2018; Hilert, 2021). This scholarship has identified predictors of sustainable behaviors (Koger et al, 2011; Wals, 2012); perceptions of environmental injustice (i.e., the belief that communities are disproportionally impacted by climate change; Hilert, 2021; Pulido, 2000); and more recently, how concerns about the environment impact mental health. Specifically, climate change anxiety (i.e., anxiety about harm resulting from ecological disasters) and ecoparalysis (i.e., inaction due to overwhelming fears about climate change) have been studied as threats to mental health (Albrecht, 2011; Clayton, 2020).…”