Moments of Change

Publication date

2025-09-29

Authors

Whitmarsh, Lorraine
Burningham, Kate
Timmer, Vanessa JISNI 0000000072671242
Akenji, Lewis
Mastny, Lisa

Editors

Akenji, Lewis
Vergragt, Philip J.
Szejnwald Brown, Halina
Smith, Thomas S.J.
Wallnöfer, Laura Maria

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Part of book
Open Access logo

License

cc_by_nc_sa

Abstract

Many of our everyday behaviors are habits, which are hard to break. But certain periods of profound, rapid disruption in people’s lives can act as catalysts for change by disrupting the context of habits. These periods are known as “moments of change” (MoCs). They may be planned or unexpected. MoCs can be divided into two categories: biographical events or “life transitions” – such as relocation, becoming a parent, starting university, and retiring – and exogenous events, such as extreme weather events, infrastructure disruption, economic shock, and political crises. Biographical MoCs operate at the individual or household level (e.g., relocation, parenthood), whereas exogenous MoCs operate at a wider scale (e.g., financial crises, pandemics, droughts). MoCs may remove cues that maintain habits and may change the social, economic, and physical contexts of action, leading the individual to consider alternatives (see Behavior Change). This window of opportunity is one in which people are open to making new decisions or finding themselves in a new context that catalyzes or even imposes behavior changes. These windows of opportunity can make behavior change interventions more effective during this period than in more stable times.

Keywords

General Social Sciences, General Economics,Econometrics and Finance, General Business,Management and Accounting, General Environmental Science

Citation

Whitmarsh, L, Burningham, K, Timmer, V, Akenji, L & Mastny, L 2025, Moments of Change. in L Akenji, P J Vergragt, H Szejnwald Brown, T S J Smith & L M Wallnöfer (eds), Vocabulary for Sustainable Consumption and Lifestyles : A Language for Our Common Future. Taylor & Francis, pp. 74-78. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003584056-15