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Examining the determinants of public environmental concern: Evidence from national public surveys
Institution:1. Fundación Nueva Cultura del Agua. Calle Pedro Cerbuna, 12, 50009-Zaragoza Spain;2. University of Zaragoza, AgriFood Institute of Aragon, Department of Agricultural Sciences and the Environment. Miguel Servet, 177, 50013, Zaragoza Spain;3. University of Murcia, Departamento Didáctica de las Ciencias Experimentales. Facultad de Educación. Universidad de Murcia. Campus de Espinardo, 12. 30100- Murcia Spain;4. University of Murcia, Department of Ecology and Hydrology. Campus de Espinardo, 30100-Murcia Spain
Abstract:Early research showed that citizens’ environmental concern in the United States was linked to three individual-level factors: socio-demographic variables, political orientations, and personal beliefs or worldviews about human-nature relations. Given many changes in the American society over the last several decades, one important, yet unanswered question is whether these factors still drive public environmental concern in the United States today, and if so, to what extent. This study, drawing from extant theoretical and empirical studies, aims to reinvestigate the determinants of citizens’ environmental concern by employing three national public surveys conducted in 2004, 2007, and 2013. Our data analyses confirm and expand the findings of previous research on the significance and importance of political ideology, fundamental beliefs about human-nature relations, and certain socioeconomic factors such as gender and race in explaining citizens’ environmental concern. More specifically, political liberals, people with higher New Ecological Paradigm values, females, and Non-Whites tend to be more concerned about environmental problems than their counterparts are. Our data analyses also reveal some interesting findings when compared to many previous studies: first, our data indicate a positive relationship between age and environmental concern, suggesting that older people in the United States are more concerned about the environment than younger adults; second, unlike most past research showing a positive Education-Environmental Concern relationship, our study suggests that education level seems to have little effect in explaining citizens’ environmental concern measured in this study. Key implications for environmental policymaking and recommendations for future research are discussed in the conclusion.
Keywords:Environmental concern  Environmental policy  New Ecological Paradigm (NEP)  Political ideology  socio-demographics  United States
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