Public Support for Climate Change Policy: Consistency in the Influence of Values and Attitudes Over Time and Across Specific Policy Alternatives

This study examines the factors that explain public preferences for a set of climate change policy alternatives. While scholarly work indicates a relationship between attitudes and values on views toward specific issues, the literature often examines general support for issues rather than specific p...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Review of policy research 2014-11, Vol.31 (6), p.555-583
Hauptverfasser: Stoutenborough, James W., Bromley-Trujillo, Rebecca, Vedlitz, Arnold
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container_title The Review of policy research
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creator Stoutenborough, James W.
Bromley-Trujillo, Rebecca
Vedlitz, Arnold
description This study examines the factors that explain public preferences for a set of climate change policy alternatives. While scholarly work indicates a relationship between attitudes and values on views toward specific issues, the literature often examines general support for issues rather than specific policy proposals. Consequently, it is unclear the extent to which these attitudes and values affect specific policy considerations. This project examines public support for five climate change policy options in two national surveys taken three years apart. The empirical analysis reveals that time is a factor and that those who are liberal, have strong ecological values, report greater concern for climate change, and trust experts are consistently more supportive of the climate policy options considered here. The results shed new light on the nuanced views of the American public toward climate change.
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source PAIS Index; Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; Business Source Complete; Political Science Complete; Wiley Online Library All Journals
subjects Alternatives
Climate change
Ecology
Empirical research
environment
Environmental policy
experts
governance
policy
Policy analysis
pollution
Preferences
public opinion
United States
values
title Public Support for Climate Change Policy: Consistency in the Influence of Values and Attitudes Over Time and Across Specific Policy Alternatives
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