Popular press & blogs

  • Shreedhar, G., Laffan, K., and Giurge, L. (2022). Is Remote Work Actually Better for the Environment? In the Harvard Business Review (for the article click here, for the More Than Now report, click here, and for coverage of this piece see here).

  • Shreedhar and Galizzi. (2022). Help Me, Help Us: Framing Personal and Planetary Benefits of Eating More Veg. In the Character & Context Blog from The Society for Personality and Social Psychology (link).

  • Banerjee, S., Savani, S., and Shreedhar, G. (2021). The public have supported ‘hard’ policy measures, but will they still do so when the pandemic is over? LSE Covid-19 Blog (link).

  • Shreedhar, G and Mourato. (2020). When people know how COVID-19 probably started, they are more likely to support wildlife conservation. LSE Covid-19 Blog (link).

Public events & lectures

  • Animals and humans - towards a closer relationship? At the 2022 Cambridge Festival of Ideas (link to video of the panel discussion)

  • Leveraging Moments of Change for Pro-Environmental Behavioural Transformation with Prof. Lorraine Whitmarsh. A moment of change is when circumstances shift quickly. They include life course moments – like becoming a parent or changing careers - and external changes – such as travel disruption or the impact of wider societal disruption. The relationship between moments of change and environmental impact is complex. There are differences across individuals, cultures and society. (link to LSE Public Lecture recording and video).

  • Rare’s Be.Hive: Behavioral Solutions for Water Pollution. Link to event and my talk on Storytelling for Environmental Behaviour Change.

  • We Are All in This Together: has COVID-19 taught us how to save the world? Can the massive shift in the way we now relate to each other, and the rules we choose to live by, help us tackle other collective threats to humanity, like climate change? (link).

  • What Work Disappeared? COVID-19 and Labour Market Outcomes for the Under 25s. Has the COVID-19 pandemic led to worse career prospects for young people? Research has shown a widening gap in the likelihood of young people being in employment, particularly in banking, finance and insurance, and public administration, education and health. Teresa Almeida and Ganga Shreedhar discuss the need for more inclusive labour market policies to create opportunities for younger workers to counter the adverse, long-term impacts of COVID-19. (podcast link)