Extreme weather experience and climate change risk perceptions: The roles of partisanship and climate change cause attribution

被引:7
|
作者
Ai, Xin [1 ]
Han, Ziqiang [2 ,3 ]
Zhang, Qiang [1 ,3 ,4 ]
机构
[1] Beijing Normal Univ, Innovat Ctr Risk Resilience, Sch Govt, Beijing, Peoples R China
[2] Shandong Univ, Sch Polit Sci & Publ Adm, Jinan, Peoples R China
[3] Tsinghua Univ, Ctr Crisis Management Res, Beijing, Peoples R China
[4] Innovat Ctr Risk Resilience, 19 Xinjiekouwai St, Beijing 100875, Peoples R China
关键词
CHANGE BELIEFS; VIEWS; POLARIZATION; AWARENESS; IDEOLOGY; EVENTS;
D O I
10.1016/j.ijdrr.2024.104511
中图分类号
P [天文学、地球科学];
学科分类号
07 ;
摘要
Climate change risk perceptions are crucial in influencing individuals' behavioral changes and shaping policy preferences for climate change mitigation. Experience of recent extreme weather events may enhance people's awareness of climate change and thus alter their attitudes toward climate change. This study examines the correlations between extreme weather experience and climate change risk perceptions using Australia's most recent representative national survey data (2020 Australian Survey of Social Attitudes). The results demonstrate that the positive effect of extreme weather experience on climate change risk perceptions, both to the World and to Australia, became nonsignificant when all variables were controlled. Notably, extreme weather experiences amplified the perceptions of climate change risk among individuals without party affiliations, but they did not affect those with solid party affiliations, neither with the National -Liberal Coalition nor Labor or the Greens. Furthermore, the impact of extreme weather experiences on climate change risk perceptions is not direct but primarily indirect through individuals' cause attribution of climate change. This paper provides valuable insights into the linkage mechanism between extreme weather experience and climate change risk perceptions.
引用
收藏
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Climate change news coverage, partisanship, and public opinion
    Merry, Melissa K.
    CLIMATIC CHANGE, 2024, 177 (12)
  • [22] Some Deficits and Some Misperceptions: Linking Partisanship With Climate Change Cognitions
    Chinn, Sedona
    Pasek, Josh
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PUBLIC OPINION RESEARCH, 2021, 33 (02) : 235 - 254
  • [23] Climate Change Beliefs and Perceptions of Weather-Related Changes in the United Kingdom
    Taylor, Andrea
    de Bruin, Waendi Bruine
    Dessai, Suraje
    RISK ANALYSIS, 2014, 34 (11) : 1995 - 2004
  • [24] I'll See It When I Believe It: Motivated Numeracy in Perceptions of Climate Change Risk*
    Nurse, Matthew S.
    Grant, Will J.
    ENVIRONMENTAL COMMUNICATION-A JOURNAL OF NATURE AND CULTURE, 2020, 14 (02): : 184 - 201
  • [25] Personal harm and support for climate change mitigation policies: Evidence from 10 US communities impacted by extreme weather
    Zanocco, Chad
    Boudet, Hilary
    Nilson, Roberta
    Flora, June
    GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE-HUMAN AND POLICY DIMENSIONS, 2019, 59
  • [26] Corporate perceptions of climate change in Malaysia
    Begum, Rawshan Ara
    Pereira, Joy Jacqueline
    AFRICAN JOURNAL OF BUSINESS MANAGEMENT, 2011, 5 (11): : 4299 - 4305
  • [27] What shapes perceptions of climate change?
    Weber, Elke U.
    WILEY INTERDISCIPLINARY REVIEWS-CLIMATE CHANGE, 2010, 1 (03) : 332 - 342
  • [28] Attributing weather extremes to 'climate change': A review
    Hulme, Mike
    PROGRESS IN PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY-EARTH AND ENVIRONMENT, 2014, 38 (04): : 499 - 511
  • [29] Climate Change Perceptions and Observations of Agricultural Stakeholders in the Northern Great Plains
    Grimberg, Bruna Irene
    Ahmed, Selena
    Ellis, Colter
    Miller, Zachariah
    Menalled, Fabian
    SUSTAINABILITY, 2018, 10 (05)
  • [30] Risk experience and smallholder farmers' climate change adaptation decision
    Habtemariama, Lemlem Teklegiorgis
    Gandorfer, Markus
    Kassa, Getachew Abate
    Sieber, Stefan
    CLIMATE AND DEVELOPMENT, 2020, 12 (04) : 385 - 393