Anti-reflexivity and climate change skepticism in the US general public

Date

2016

Authors

McCright, Aaron M

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

ANU Press

Abstract

The leading theoretical explanation for the mobilization of organized climate change denial is the Anti-Reflexivity Thesis, which characterizes the climate change denial countermovement as a collective force defending the industrial capitalist system. In this study, I demonstrate that the Anti-Reflexivity Thesis also provides theoretical purchase for explaining patterns of climate change skepticism among regular citizens. Analyzing nationally representative survey data from multiple waves of the University of Texas Energy Poll, I examine key predictors of climate change skepticism within the US general public. Identification with or trust in groups representing the industrial capitalist system increases the likelihood of climate change skepticism. Also, identification with or trust in groups representing forces of reflexivity (e.g., the environmental movement and scientific community) decreases the likelihood of such skepticism. Further, this study finds that climate change skeptics report policy preferences, voting intentions, and behavioral intentions generally supportive of the existing fossil fuels–based industrial capitalist system.

Description

Keywords

anti-reflexivity thesis, climate change skepticism, policy preferences, voting intentions, behavioral intentions

Citation

Source

Human Ecology Review

Type

Journal article

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

Open Access

License Rights

Restricted until