<> "The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license."^^ . <> . . . "Religion and Climate Change"^^ . "While climate change and religion might not always have gone together very well, climate change has \r\nbecome a hot topic in religious discourse in recent years. While certain worldviews such as \r\nanthropocentrism in the Abrahamic religions have been criticized for being a bad influence on people’s \r\nbehaviour and even contributing to climate and ecological degradation, on the individual level, people have \r\nfound ways to connect their beliefs to a concern for climate and ecology. As a consequence people have \r\nbecome more aware of the options and have already started to be more careful about their own lifestyles in \r\nconnection with the climate. In practice, other than on an individual level, climate adaptation activities, \r\nprojects or financing by religious organisations have still been very limited. One of the reasons might be that\r\nthe organisations that are actively busy with charitable causes and community projects mainly focus on \r\npeople, where the work that one is doing is way more visible. This paper tries to answer the question: how \r\ndo people from different faith-based communities perceive climate change and climate change interventions\r\nwithin the urban fabric of Groningen? It is an in-depth case study that wherein one focus group with \r\nmembers of a Buddhist community and six interviews with people from Jewish, Mormon and different \r\nProtestant communities in Groningen, were conducted. The interview data is combined with statements on \r\nclimate change by religious leaders and data on different (planned) climate change adaptation projects in \r\nand around Groningen.\r\nFindings suggest that people from different religious organisations have found ways to connect the \r\nimportance of climate change action to their religious beliefs and values. Most welcome climate change \r\nadaptation projects in the city of Groningen if they do not reduce practicality significantly, or result in \r\nhindrance to a particular group of people. Some organisations have started actively participating in climate \r\nadaptation of their own, church communities like the protestant municipality Groningen-Zuid. Whether the \r\nstart of projects like this is a trend that will continue to happen among the religious community of \r\nGroningen or in general remains to be seen. Charitable projects and community involvement from different \r\nreligious organisations are still often focused on helping people directly instead of climate adaptation \r\nprojects or charities that only help people indirectly."^^ . "2022" . . . . . . . "Thijs van den"^^ . "Berg"^^ . "Thijs van den Berg"^^ . . . . . . "Religion and Climate Change (Text)"^^ . . . "Scriptie+280122_1513.pdf"^^ . . . "Religion and Climate Change (Other)"^^ . . . . . . "Religion and Climate Change (Other)"^^ . . . . . . "small.jpg"^^ . . . "Religion and Climate Change (Other)"^^ . . . . . . "medium.jpg"^^ . . . "Religion and Climate Change (Other)"^^ . . . . . . "preview.jpg"^^ . . . "Religion and Climate Change (Other)"^^ . . . . . . "lightbox.jpg"^^ . . "HTML Summary of #3857 \n\nReligion and Climate Change\n\n" . "text/html" . .