Draft:Cameron Brick

Social psychologist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Cameron Brick is a social and environmental psychologist at the University of Amsterdam whose research addresses pro-environmental behavior, the intention-behavior gap, and climate protests. Brick's research has focused on objective measures of high-emissions behaviors.[1] He completed his PhD in 2015 at the University of California, Santa Barbara under David Sherman.


Het Parool[2] published a profile featuring Brick’s research and commentary about public responses to environmental problems. The Washington Post,[3], The Guardian,[4] and de Volkskrant[5] have interviewed Brick as an expert in behavioral science.

Brick led an article on how social identity and visibility shape pro-environmental behavior[6], which was referenced in policy reports by the United Nations[7] and the European Union[8] and reported in The Atlantic.[9] He co-authored a multi-country study in Science Advances[10] testing interventions across 63 countries that was cited in policy reports by the OECD,[11] and the Publications Office of the European Union,[12] and that received media coverage in The Washington Post,[13] The Guardian,[14] and Der Standard.[15] His co-authored article on trust in scientists[16], in Nature Human Behaviour, was cited in a report on the use of behavioral insights in policymaking by the Publications Office of the European Union[17] and was covered in The Guardian[18].

Awards

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI