Behavioral research on climate change often treats mitigation and adaptation as discrete behaviors. However, some climate-relevant behaviors can promote both mitigation and adaptation goals. Here, we demonstrate a comparative approach where identical climate-relevant behaviors can promote either climate-change mitigation or adaptation goals and present the 10-item Comparable Adaptation and Mitigation (CAM) list of behaviors. In two between-subjects online studies (total N = 1,474), we test whether framing these behaviors as promoting mitigation versus adaptation influences individuals’ willingness to engage in them and their perceived efficacy. Across both studies, we find willingness to engage in climate-relevant behaviors is not significantly influenced by goal-framing. Participants were more willing to engage in climate-relevant behaviors with either frame when the behaviors mainly influenced the individuals’ private (vs. public) sphere. Study 2 also provides initial evidence that framing climate-relevant behaviors as serving a climate-change goal (either mitigation or adaptation), as compared to presenting the same behaviors with no goal-framing, reduced the perceived efficacy of these climate-relevant behaviors and, subsequently, reduced participants’ willingness to engage in these behaviors. We discuss the results in the context of existing literature on mitigation and adaptation and describe the potential of this novel comparative approach to improve scholars’ understanding of the motivation to engage in climate-relevant behaviors. • CAM list compares equivalent acts framed as serving mitigation or adaptation goals. • Both goal specifications may lower behavior willingness and response efficacy. • Reduced willingness was observed mainly in conservatives and homeowners. • Response efficacy mediated effects of goal-specification on willingness. • Private-sphere CAM behaviors were preferred over public-sphere behaviors.
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Atar Herziger
Joseph G. Guerriero
Liat Levontin
Journal of Environmental Psychology
Pennsylvania State University
Technion – Israel Institute of Technology
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Herziger et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69a75e44c6e9836116a28afc — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvp.2026.102934