Northwestern Researchers Examine Political Divide Behind Climate Change Beliefs
IPR's James Druckman, Mary McGrath seek to understand partisan divide
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Despite a scientific consensus, citizens are divided when it comes to climate change, often along political lines, and scholars want to better understand why.
“We were interested in understanding the clear political divide in the U.S. on climate change beliefs and related policies and behaviors. Nearly all Democrats believe in human-induced climate change and many support climate mitigation policies, yet many Republicans remain skeptical,” said IPR political scientist James Druckman, co-author of a recent article in Nature Climate Change.
Druckman said a prominent explanation for the divide is that it stems from directional “motivated reasoning,” meaning, in this case, individuals skeptical about climate change reject ostensibly credible scientific information because it contradicts what they already believe.
“This is a depressing scenario for those hoping to get movement on climate change opinions,” Druckman added.
“An equally consistent explanation is that rather than flatly rejecting information that contradicts what they already believe, people may simply differ in what they consider reliable information,” said IPR political scientist Mary McGrath, who co-authored the study.
In fact, much to their surprise, the authors found that there is virtually no evidence for the aforementioned “motivated reasoning.”
“We have little clear evidence that can differentiate directional motivated reasoning from an accuracy motivated model—and the distinction between the two models matters critically for effective communication,” McGrath said.
“Republicans might reject a scientific report because they do not believe the authors of the report to be credible or may be less trustworthy of science in general,” he added. “This is important because it means closing the gap on climate change would involve offering distinct types of evidence and messaging, and we imagine this actually may be what is happening as we see more climate change messaging that appeals to values or religious authorities. This also may be why in the last year or two, Republicans have in fact significantly moved on climate change.”
A Stanford University study found that Republicans underestimate the actual number of other Republicans that believe in climate change and actually 57 percent believe there is climate change.
Furthermore, according to a December New York Times article on Republicans’ views on global warming, majorities in both parties agree that the world is experiencing global warming and call for government action to address it, while they may disagree on the cause. In addition, both parties seem to find some common ground on remedies to combat climate change.
Druckman’s attention turned to the challenge of climate change communications when he was asked to apply his expertise to the issue by the Institute for Sustainability and Energy at Northwestern (ISEN) in 2009. Since that time, Druckman, who’s also affiliated with ISEN’s Ubben Program for Climate and Carbon Science, has been “building on a research agenda that looks at how different aspects of the message affect how particular groups of people move their opinions,” he said.
McGrath is also continuing this work with a further methodological review of experiments on climate change opinion formation. “The evidence for motivated reasoning in climate change preference formation” published online earlier this week in Nature Climate Change.
James Druckman is Payson S. Wild Professor of Political Science, IPR associate director, and an IPR fellow. Mary McGrath is assistant professor of political science and IPR fellow.
This article was written by Hilary Hurd Anyaso and originally appeared on Northwestern Now.
Published: February 1, 2019.