Who are your people? – The effect of political ideology and social identity on climate-related beliefs and risk perceptions

IF 1.8 3区 社会学 Q2 POLITICAL SCIENCE
Eunbin Chung, M. Milkoreit
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

ABSTRACT Persistent divides among American voters regarding climate change, especially climate skepticism among conservatives, have long been explained with reference to ideology, vested interests, and trends of political polarization. More recently, an alternative set of explanations for the opinion gap between conservatives and liberals has been gaining traction, arguing that these divisions are generated by social identities and their effects on individual beliefs and attitudes. Here, we focus on global citizenship as a specific social identity. Seeking to connect ideology and social identity approaches, we study how the interaction between a person’s ideological leanings and their social identity as a global citizen relates to beliefs and risk perceptions regarding climate change. Analyzing two kinds of survey data, we find that a global citizen identity moderates the relationship between a conservative ideology and a person’s climate-related beliefs and risk perceptions, while it does not seem to have the same effect for liberal individuals. In other words, a global citizen identity is associated with a potential decrease in the ideological divide between conservatives and liberals regarding climate change. We explore the implications of these findings for climate change communication and policy and other issue areas.
谁是你的人?-政治意识形态和社会认同对气候相关信仰和风险认知的影响
长期以来,美国选民在气候变化问题上的持续分歧,尤其是保守派的气候怀疑主义,一直被解释为意识形态、既得利益和政治两极分化趋势。最近,对保守派和自由派之间的意见分歧的另一种解释越来越受欢迎,认为这些分歧是由社会身份及其对个人信仰和态度的影响产生的。在这里,我们把全球公民作为一种特定的社会身份来关注。为了将意识形态和社会认同方法联系起来,我们研究了一个人的意识形态倾向和他们作为全球公民的社会认同之间的相互作用如何与气候变化的信仰和风险感知相关。通过分析两类调查数据,我们发现全球公民身份调节了保守意识形态与个人气候相关信仰和风险感知之间的关系,而对自由主义个体似乎没有同样的影响。换句话说,全球公民身份与保守派和自由派在气候变化问题上意识形态分歧的潜在缩小有关。我们探讨了这些发现对气候变化沟通和政策以及其他问题领域的影响。
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来源期刊
Politics Groups and Identities
Politics Groups and Identities POLITICAL SCIENCE-
自引率
5.60%
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