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Session Submission Type: Refereed Roundtable (60 minute)
These papers examine how environmental attitudes and behaviors are shaped by social position, political ideology, and identity, highlighting the roles of generation, economic insecurity, race, gender, and trust in shaping climate concern and action.
Does Period of Birth Matter? The Boomers, their Successors, and Environmental Concern in the United States - Lazarus Adua, University of Utah; Brett Clark, University of Utah; Karen Xuan Zhang, University of Utah
Entitled to the Earth: Aggrieved Entitlement, Economic Insecurity, and White Men’s Climate Attitudes - Saman Seyfi, University of Oklahoma; Dan Wang, University of Oklahoma
From Risk Perception to Action Willingness: Political Identity and Environmental Commitment in the United States - Nazma Ahmed, West Virginia University
Income and Environmental Concern: What Matters Most is Political Ideology - Lazarus Adua, University of Utah; Brett Clark, University of Utah; Daniel Auerbach, University of Wyoming; Karen Xuan Zhang, University of Utah; Jared Weld Sanborn, University of Utah
Trust, Political Ideology, and Carbon Dependence —A Multilevel Analysis of Europeans’ Climate Change Perceptions - Feng Hao, University of South Florida