{"id":12652,"date":"2017-02-23t18:19:05","date_gmt":"2017-02-23t18:19:05","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/dpetrov.2create.studio\/planet\/wordpress\/climate-extremes-can-ignite-violence-and-more-intolerant-societies\/"},"modified":"2023-03-07t19:39:42","modified_gmt":"2023-03-07t19:39:42","slug":"climate-extremes-can-ignite-violence-and-more-intolerant-societies","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"\/\/www.getitdoneaz.com\/story\/climate-extremes-can-ignite-violence-and-more-intolerant-societies\/","title":{"rendered":"climate extremes can ignite violence and more intolerant societies"},"content":{"rendered":"
by janice cantieri<\/strong><\/p>\n rising extremes of droughts, floods or food shortages can reduce a country\u2019s political stability and cultural tolerance, warned scientists at the american association for the advancements of science conference in boston this weekend.<\/p>\n as global temperatures continue to rise, these and other environmental threats are expected to increase.<\/p>\n \u201cwhat you have here is a model where different forms of ecological threat are producing stronger cultural institutions,\u201d but stronger in the sense of more regimented, said joshua conrad jackson, a psychologist at the university of north carolina, chapel hill. \u201cthat could carry over into intergenerational changes in cultural institutions.\u201d<\/p>\n if a parent raises a child in a time of high ecological threat, they are likely to raise that child with stricter rules and regulations and tightened cultural norms, jackson said.<\/p>\n a team of social scientists and climatologists presented their preliminary findings from surveys historical cultural and climate records. they found that higher rates of ecological threat generally lead to stricter, more intolerant cultural norms in a society and higher rates of violence.<\/p>\n jackson, with michele gelfand at the university of maryland, found that ecological threats like food deprivation, pathogen prevalence, and natural disasters lead to higher pressures to marry, more moralizing religions, and autocratic leadership.<\/p>\n other researchers discussed the ability to detect the influence of past environmental changes on culture, and whether these changes affected a country\u2019s political stability.<\/p>\n eric jones, an environmental anthropologist at the university of texas, found that after events such as a natural disaster, people tend to band together for at least a short period of time. but if the ecological event is chronic or repeated, like a drought that lasts for years, there is \u201cless to give\u201d and less sharing and redistribution within the community, he said.<\/p>\n