Mapping Racial and Ethnic Variation in Climate Belief Networks

Evan Stewart, Katsyris Rivera-Kientz, Timothy Dacey
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Abstract

Past research observing differences in environmental attitudes across racial and ethnic groups often mischaracterized those differences as deficits, casting environmental concern as a predominately White issue. Our study contributes to current work correcting this account by mapping substantive differences in the structure of climate attitudes across racial and ethnic groups. We use belief network analysis on 14 years of survey data from the Climate Change in the American Mind (CCAM) survey ( n = 20,396), and we find substantive differences in the climate belief networks of White, Black, and Hispanic survey respondents. These differences are not primarily about the strength or weakness of associations between attitudes, as theorized by deficit accounts. Instead, we find different attitudes are most central to these respective belief networks. We argue research on the social construction of race and ethnicity can better measure substantive variation in climate attitudes among Black, Indigenous, and People of Color (BIPOC) respondents by attending to how racialized experiences with climate change may produce aggregated belief networks with different profiles of salient issues and different interpretive frameworks.
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绘制气候信念网络中的种族和民族差异图
过去的研究观察到不同种族和民族群体在环境态度上的差异,但往往将这些差异错误地描述为缺陷,将环境问题视为白人的主要问题。我们的研究通过描绘不同种族和民族群体在气候态度结构上的实质性差异,为目前纠正这种说法的工作做出了贡献。我们对《美国人心目中的气候变化》(CCAM)调查(n = 20,396)的 14 年调查数据进行了信念网络分析,发现白人、黑人和西班牙裔调查对象的气候信念网络存在实质性差异。这些差异并不像赤字理论所说的那样,主要涉及态度之间关联的强弱。相反,我们发现不同的态度在这些各自的信念网络中占据着最重要的位置。我们认为,关于种族和民族的社会建构的研究可以更好地衡量黑人、土著人和有色人种(BIPOC)受访者在气候态度方面的实质性差异,方法是关注种族化的气候变化经历如何产生具有不同突出问题特征和不同解释框架的综合信念网络。
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