The Role of Fear- Sadness- and Anger in Shaping Support for Climate Policies: Evidence from a UK Survey Experiment
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Date
2024
Authors
Defne Gunay
Gizem Melek
Gizem Arikan
Clara Fauli Molas
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
MARY ANN LIEBERT INC
Open Access Color
Green Open Access
No
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Publicly Funded
Yes
Abstract
Emotions play a significant role in motivating climate action but the nature and the direction of the relationship between emotions and attitudes toward climate policy are relatively understudied. We conducted a survey experiment (United Kingdom n = 1330) in which we experimentally manipulated incidental emotions to consider the effects of fear anger and sadness on support for different climate policies. In terms of informative policies the results show that inducing sadness significantly increases support for early warning systems for disaster predictions but has no notable effect on providing health risk information concerning climate change. Regarding protective policies inducing fear positively and significantly influences support for banning petrol cars while an immediate ban on coal plants shows no statistically significant effect. Interestingly contrary to the expectations and findings in the literature we found the negative effect of anger treatment on the support for punitive measures oriented toward high-electricity-consuming households and no effect on punitive measures against businesses and frequent flyers. Our findings highlight the potent influence of emotions in motivating support for specific climate policies revealing their intricate nature. At times certain emotions such as anger can even cause reduced support for climate policies.
Description
Keywords
adaptation, climate policy, emotions, experiment, mitigation, public opinion, INFORMATION-SEEKING, RISK PERCEPTIONS, EMOTIONS, GUILT, ADAPTATION, MITIGATION, COMMUNICATION, PREFERENCES, ENGAGEMENT, FRAMEWORK
Fields of Science
Citation
WoS Q
Scopus Q

OpenCitations Citation Count
1
Source
Sustainability and Climate Change
Volume
17
Issue
Start Page
254
End Page
266
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CrossRef : 2
Scopus : 2
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