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These types of conservatives care less about climate change

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People who believe in social dominance structures and right-wing authoritarianism are less likely to act on climate change or environmental problems, researchers have found. The Kiwi and Australian-led research looked at the strength of these views and environmentalism over time through the New Zealand Attitudes and Values Study. They found both groups had low willingness to make sacrifices to benefit the environment over time, especially those who valued social dominance orientation - belief in a hierarchy of groups organised by things like age, gender and race.

Journal/conference: PLOS One

Link to research (DOI): 10.1371/journal.pone.0219067

Organisation/s: Victoria University of Wellington, University of Canberra

Media release

Abstract

Social dominance orientation (SDO) and right-wing authoritarianism (RWA) are ideological attitudes that predict lower concern for the environment and less willingness to act on climate change. Research generally shows that SDO and RWA exhibit moderate, negative relationships with environmentalism. We examine the longitudinal influence of SDO and RWA on people’s willingness to change their behaviour to benefit the environment in a national probability sample over five years. We show that both ideological attitudes relate to lower environmentalism across time and that the SDO effect was stronger than the RWA effect, yet the association from environmentalism to later endorsement of SDO is stronger than the reverse. Interestingly, these findings suggest that the more likely temporal association flows from environmentalism to SDO.

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