Generation of change? South African attitudes towards climate change in comparative perspective

IF 1.3 4区 经济学 Q3 DEVELOPMENT STUDIES Development Southern Africa Pub Date : 2022-05-04 DOI:10.1080/0376835X.2022.2070454
B. Roberts, J. Struwig, S. Gordon, Thobeka Zondi, S. Hannan, Michael Gastrow
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

ABSTRACT The risks posed by climate change have become increasingly apparent. In response, the South African government has introduced various policy measures, reflecting a commitment to transitioning to a low-carbon economy. Successfully navigating this transition requires policy processes to take account of individual preferences, concerns, and lived realities. Yet a significant knowledge gap remains. Data from the South African Social Attitudes Survey (SASAS, 2017) are used to test aspects of the Stern’s value-belief-norm model. Climate beliefs, climate concern and personal responsibility are profiled. The strongest predictors of climate concern are a belief in the reality of climate change, expectations of negative impacts, and the salience afforded to climate change. In turn, climate concern, attribution scepticism, and impact scepticism are most likely to determine feelings of personal responsibility to reduce climate change. These findings have implications for climate change communication and interventions to minimise the human development consequences of climate change.
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变革的一代?比较南非对气候变化的态度
气候变化带来的风险越来越明显。作为回应,南非政府推出了各种政策措施,反映了向低碳经济转型的承诺。成功地引导这一转变需要政策过程考虑到个人偏好、关注点和生活现实。然而,一个重大的知识鸿沟仍然存在。来自南非社会态度调查(SASAS, 2017)的数据用于测试斯特恩的价值-信念-规范模型的各个方面。气候信念,气候关注和个人责任。对气候问题最强烈的预测因素是对气候变化现实的信念、对负面影响的预期以及对气候变化的重视。反过来,气候问题、归因怀疑主义和影响怀疑主义最有可能决定个人对减少气候变化的责任感。这些发现对气候变化沟通和干预措施具有启示意义,以尽量减少气候变化对人类发展的影响。
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来源期刊
Development Southern Africa
Development Southern Africa DEVELOPMENT STUDIES-
CiteScore
4.20
自引率
7.10%
发文量
42
期刊介绍: The Development Southern Africa editorial team are pleased to announce that the journal has been accepted into the Thomson Reuters (formerly ISI) Social Science Citation Index. The journal will receive its first Impact Factor in 2010. Development Southern Africa offers a platform for expressing views and encouraging debate among development specialists, policy decision makers, scholars and students in the wider professional fraternity and especially in southern Africa. The journal publishes articles that reflect innovative thinking on key development challenges and policy issues facing South Africa and other countries in the southern African region.
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