“…In addition to professional values and ethics that support the engagement of social workers in addressing climate change, the profession’s unique focus on the person‐in‐environment provides further evidence of the importance of social workers’ understanding the complex effects of climate change (Kahn & Scher, 2002; Norton, 2012). The traditional conception of person‐in‐environment has long been criticized for not including the natural environment (Besthorn & Canda, 2002; Coates & Gray, 2012; Jones, 2010; Norton, 2012; Peeters, 2012; Shajahan & Sharma, 2018), but it is clear that the social work profession cannot continue to do so. Because the person‐in‐environment perspective has excluded the natural environment, social workers have not been actively engaged in climate change advocacy, planning, and decision‐making (Alston, 2015; Shajahan & Sharma, 2018).…”