American perceptions and attitudes about domestic climate migrants and migration

Brittany S. Harris, Mark Brunson, Peter D. Howe
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Abstract

Domestic climate migration is likely to increase in the future, but we know little about public perceptions and attitudes about climate migrants and migration. Understanding how perceptions and attitudes are formed is a critical task in assessing public support for assistance policies and developing effective messaging campaigns. In this paper, we aim to better understand how the U.S. public perceives domestic climate migrants. We use novel survey data to identify the relationship between climate change risk perceptions and awareness of ‘climate migrants’, belief that domestic climate migration is currently happening in the U.S., perceived voluntariness of domestic climate migrant relocation, and support for the development of assistance programs for domestic climate migrants. We utilize a large, nationally representative panel of U.S. adults (N = 4,074) collected over three waves in 2022. We find that climate change risk perceptions and perceptions of whether migration is voluntary are key drivers of perceptions and attitudes toward domestic climate migrants. We provide key suggestions to policy and decision-makers to improve outcomes for host and migrant communities.
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美国人对国内气候移民和移民的看法和态度
国内气候移民在未来可能会增加,但我们对公众对气候移民和移民的看法和态度知之甚少。了解公众的看法和态度是如何形成的,是评估公众对援助政策的支持和制定有效信息宣传活动的关键任务。在本文中,我们旨在更好地了解美国公众是如何看待国内气候移民的。我们利用新颖的调查数据来确定气候变化风险感知与对 "气候移民 "的认识、认为美国目前正在发生国内气候移民、认为国内气候移民搬迁是自愿的以及支持为国内气候移民制定援助计划之间的关系。我们利用了一个大型的、具有全国代表性的美国成年人面板(N = 4,074),该面板在 2022 年分三次收集。我们发现,气候变化风险认知和对移民是否自愿的认知是国内气候移民认知和态度的关键驱动因素。我们为政策和决策者提供了重要建议,以改善东道国和移民社区的结果。
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