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When asked about major threats to their country, Europeans are more likely than Americans to cite global climate change, according to a recent Pew Research Center survey. Just 56 percent of Americans see climate change as a major threat, versus an average of 64 percent of Europeans surveyed.
Public response can vary depending on what’s going on in the news that week. Surveys of these types of surveys find no single explanation for how the public perceives the threat of climate change.
Of course, many explanations exist. As a climatologist who has taught university classes and given public lectures on global climate change for 30 years, I find it clear that public concern about climate change has evolved dramatically over the past three decades. In the US, now more than ever, it seems tied to ideology.
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It’s possible that such knowledge translates into a sense of responsibility for mitigating climate change. But having more general scientific knowledge is not as relevant as knowing specifically about climate change.
A person’s outlook on the world can also complicate matters. Another recent Pew survey found that Americans are more likely to believe they control their own destiny and that they “tend to prioritise individual liberty, while Europeans tend to value the role of the state to ensure no one in society is in need.”
Research on the respective roles of scientific literacy and worldview reaches different conclusions. Psychologist Sophie Guy and colleagues argue that knowing the causes of climate change makes people more willing to accept the reality of climate change or to moderate their ideological opposition to it.
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By contrast, Yale scholar Dan Kahan and colleagues find that people with the highest level of scientific literacy often use that literacy to retain and justify prior beliefs – what they call the “polarising impact of science literacy.” In other words: “I’m smart, I’ve read the evidence and it confirms my prior understanding.”
When you look more closely at recent survey responses in the US, the most striking and consistent finding is that political affiliation influences perceptions of climate change.
In the US, Democrats report, at consistently higher rates than Republicans, that climate change exists. Merely substituting the term “global warming” – now a politically charged catchword – for “climate change” makes the differences larger.
The divide between parties within the US far exceeds the divide found between the US as a whole and Europe. Political divisions also exist in Europe, and public opinion polls in the UK and Norway show that party similarly influences the perceived threat of climate change. However, there’s some evidence that the US Republican Party is anomalous among conservative parties internationally.
It’s possible that the strong two-party system in the US leads to a more binary mode of thinking on this issue that does not accurately represent that of the scientific community. Sociologist Aaron McCright and his colleagues argue that the high number of Americans identifying with the political right explains why the US, unlike other wealthy countries, is less concerned about climate change.
Some suggest that the political divide has fuelled an industry of climate change deniers and skeptics, distorting public perception about climate change science. Science historians Naomi Oreskes and Erik Conway argue in their book Merchants of Doubt that denial is about more than the science. It’s about political and economic systems that individuals hold dear. It also can result from differences in professional culture or personal values.
In Europe, differences between countries can also be explained by the voices of conservative think tanks and the media, but these voices are more influential in the US than anywhere else because of the two-party system. Partisan clashes about climate change emerge from influential, well-funded sources that wield great influence on Congress, the media and ultimately the public. By contrast, most European countries have more than two parties, and arguably the political influence of corporations is lower.
Given the political divide on climate change in the US, addressing this 21st-century threat will require creative thinking that recognises different worldviews and “beliefs” in climate change. The US House Climate Solutions Caucus is a step in the right direction.
The author is a Professor of Geography at University of South Carolina. This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.
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