Trust and Public Support for Environmental Protection in Diverse National Contexts

Worldwide, most people share scientists' concerns about environmental problems, but reject the solution that policy experts most strongly recommend: putting a price on pollution. Why? I show that this puzzling gap between the public’s positive concerns and normative preferences is due substanti...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Malcolm Fairbrother
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Society for Sociological Science 2016-06-01
Series:Sociological Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.sociologicalscience.com/articles-v3-17-359/
Description
Summary:Worldwide, most people share scientists' concerns about environmental problems, but reject the solution that policy experts most strongly recommend: putting a price on pollution. Why? I show that this puzzling gap between the public’s positive concerns and normative preferences is due substantially to a lack of trust, particularly political trust. In multilevel models fitted to two international survey datasets, trust strongly predicts support for environmental protection within countries and, by some measures, among countries also. An influential competing theory holds that environmental attitudes correlate mostly with left versus right political ideology; the results here, however, show that this correlation is weaker and varies substantially from country to country—unlike that with trust. Theoretically, these results reflect that environmental degradation is a collective action problem and environmental protection a public good. Methodologically, they derive from the more flexible application of multilevel modeling techniques than in previous studies using such models.
ISSN:2330-6696
2330-6696