Generation
X is surprisingly unconcerned about climate change
As
the nation suffers through a summer of record-shattering heat, a
University of Michigan report finds that Generation X is lukewarm
about climate change – uninformed about the causes and unconcerned
about the potential dangers.
ERL,
26
April, 2012
"Most
Generation Xers are surprisingly disengaged, dismissive or doubtful
about whether global climate change is happening and they don't spend
much time worrying about it," said Jon D. Miller, author of "The
Generation X Report."
The
new report, the fourth in a continuing series, compares Gen X
attitudes about climate change in 2009 and 2011, and describes the
levels of concern Gen Xers have about different aspects of climate
change, as well as their sources of information on the subject.
"We
found a small but statistically significant decline between 2009 and
2011 in the level of attention and concern Generation X adults
expressed about climate change," Miller said. "In 2009,
about 22 percent said they followed the issue of climate change very
or moderately closely. In 2011, only 16 percent said they did so."
Miller
directs the Longitudinal Study of American Youth at the U-M Institute
for Social Research. The study, funded by the National Science
Foundation since 1986, now includes responses from approximately
4,000 Gen Xers – those born between 1961 and 1981, and now between
32 and 52 years of age.
Only
about 5 percent of those surveyed in 2011 were alarmed about climate
change, and another 18 percent said they were concerned about it. But
66 percent said they aren't sure that global warming is happening,
and about 10 percent said they don't believe global warming is
actually happening.
"This
is an interesting and unexpected profile," Miller said. "Few
issues engage a solid majority of adults in our busy and pluralistic
society, but the climate issue appears to attract fewer committed
activists – on either side – than I would have expected."
Because
climate change is such a complex issue, education and scientific
knowledge are important factors in explaining levels of concern,
Miller said. Adults with more education are more likely to be alarmed
and concerned about climate change, he found. And those who scored 90
or above on a 100-point Index of Civic Scientific Literacy also were
significantly more likely to be alarmed or concerned than less
knowledgeable adults. Still, 12 percent of those who were highly
literate scientifically were either dismissive or doubtful about
climate change, Miller found. He also found that partisan
affiliations predicted attitudes, with nearly half of liberal
Democrats alarmed or concerned compared with zero percent of
conservative Republicans.
"There
are clearly overlapping levels of concern among partisans of both
political parties," Miller said. "But for some individuals,
partisan loyalties may be helpful in making sense of an otherwise
complicated issue."
Given
the greater anticipated impact of climate change on future
generations, Miller expected that the parents of minor children would
be more concerned about the issue than young adults without minor
children.
"Not
so," he said. "Generation X adults without minor children
were slightly more alarmed about climate change than were parents.
The difference is small, but it is in the opposite direction than we
expected."
Miller
found that Gen X adults used a combination of information sources to
obtain information on the complex issue of climate change, with
talking to friends, co-workers and family members among the most
common sources of information.
"Climate
change is an extremely complex issue, and many Generation X adults do
not see it as an immediate problem that they need to address,"
Miller said.
"The
results of this report suggest that better educated young adults are
more likely to recognize the importance of the problem, but that
there is a broad awareness of the issue even though many adults
prefer to focus on more immediate issues – jobs and schools for
their children – than the needs of the next generation. These
results will not give great comfort to either those deeply concerned
about climate issues or those who are dismissive of the issue."
The
full report in online at: http://bit.ly/GenXReport0712
They will soon be awkened rudely.
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