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Four Europes: Climate change beliefs and attitudes predict behavior and policy preferences using a latent class analysis on 23 countries

Ondřej Kácha, Jáchym Vintr, Cameron Brick

2022Journal of Environmental Psychology62 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Building public will for climate action requires designing messages for different audiences. Previous studies that identified groups based on similar beliefs, behavior, and political preferences related to climate change were in single countries. The current pre-registered study ran latent class analysis on the European Social Survey (ESS 2016; N = 44,387) to identify groups of people according to their climate change attitudes and beliefs in 22 European countries and Israel. We found strong evidence for four groups: Engaged (18%), Pessimistic (18%), Indifferent (42%), and Doubtful (21%) and we compare the segment structure and proportions within Europe and to other countries. We identify differences between the groups in values, life satisfaction, and social trust, and then revealed that the groups uniquely predict self-reported behaviors not included in the segmentation. The findings characterize climate change beliefs for all of Europe and guide governments and pan-European bodies in designing effective communications to promote climate beliefs and actions.

Topics & Concepts

PessimismLatent class modelClimate changeEuropean Social SurveyPoliticsPsychologySocial psychologyPolitical scienceDemographic economicsEconomicsMathematicsLawEcologyEpistemologyBiologyPhilosophyStatisticsEnvironmental Education and SustainabilityClimate Change Communication and PerceptionBehavioral Health and Interventions
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