# Eco-Anxiety in Higher Education Professionals: Psychological Impacts, Institutional Trust, and Policy Implications

**Authors:** Sarah Louise Steele

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/ejihpe16010006 · European Journal of Investigation in Health, Psychology and Education · 2025-12-29

## TL;DR

This study explores how higher education professionals experience eco-anxiety, linking it to institutional trust and climate governance.

## Contribution

The paper introduces a novel conceptualization of eco-anxiety as a relational emotion tied to institutional legitimacy and sustainability misalignment.

## Key findings

- Governmental inadequacy was the strongest correlate of climate worry among higher education professionals.
- Qualitative responses revealed emotions like moral injury and exhaustion due to institutional betrayal.
- Eco-anxiety is framed as a psychosocial indicator of institutional misalignment with sustainability goals.

## Abstract

Eco-anxiety—emotional distress arising from awareness of environmental collapse—has become a critical dimension of social sustainability, linking mental well-being, professional functioning, institutional trust, and climate governance. This study investigates how higher education professionals (HEPs) experience and interpret eco-anxiety within their professional contexts, situating it as a lens on institutional legitimacy from the perspective of those who produce, teach, and steward climate knowledge. A cross-sectional mixed-methods survey of 556 HEPs was conducted across a month in 2023, combining an adapted climate anxiety scale with open-ended narratives. Quantitative analyses identified perceived governmental inadequacy as the strongest correlate of climate worry (β = 0.48, p < 0.001), accounting for 26% of the variance, whereas institutional inadequacy had a weaker effect. Qualitative findings revealed pervasive emotions of moral injury, solastalgia, and exhaustion when sustainability rhetoric outpaced genuine action, with many respondents describing governmental and institutional “betrayal.” Integrating Cognitive Appraisal Theory with concepts of moral legitimacy, the study conceptualises eco-anxiety as a relational and ethically grounded emotion reflecting the perceived misalignment between knowledge and governance. Addressing it requires transparent climate leadership, participatory governance, and organisational care infrastructures to sustain motivation and trust within universities. Eco-anxiety thus may function not only as a personal pathology but also as a psychosocial response that can illuminate HEPs’ perceptions of institutional misalignment with sustainability commitments, with implications for higher education’s contribution to the Sustainable Development Goals.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** emotional distress (MESH:D012128), Anxiety (MESH:D001007)

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

30 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12839761/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12839761