Political ideologies and the objective measurement of climate-related risks to coastal resources

被引:0
|
作者
Jordan W. Smith
Karly Bitsura-Meszaros
Erin Seekamp
Allie McCreary
Kaitlin Burroughs
机构
[1] Utah State University,Institute of Outdoor Recreation and Tourism and Department of Environment and Society
[2] NC State University,Department of Parks, Recreation and Tourism Management
来源
关键词
Biased assimilation; Eye tracking; Risk perceptions; Coastal hazards;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Nearly all research focused on understanding perceptions of climate-related risks to coastal resources has used data collected via mail surveys, online surveys or in-depth qualitative interviews. To compliment previous research, this study focuses on objective perceptions of climate-related risks to coastal resources as measured by respondents’ gaze behavior when viewing images describing or depicting climate-related impacts to coastal resources. We utilize data collected from a survey paired with an eye tracking session to measure perceptions of climate-related risks to coastal resources. We also compare the gaze behavior of liberals and conservatives when viewing an infographic and a digital photograph illustrating climate-related impacts to coastal resources; these included impacts to: 1) abiotic resources; 2) biotic resources; 3) built infrastructure; and 4) recreation opportunities. Survey data indicate liberal participants believed climate-related risks to all four types of impacts were more serious relative to conservative participants. However, eye tracking data revealed both liberal and conservative participants spent an equivalent amount of time viewing the four types of impacts. Consequently, differences in the extent to which liberals and conservatives perceive climate-related risks to coastal resources may be attributable to differences in how the two groups evaluate each of the specific impacts. Eye tracking data also revealed liberal participants noticed impacts to biotic resources faster than conservative participants. Conversely, conservative participants noticed impacts to built infrastructure faster than liberal participants. The practical implications of these findings are noteworthy: climate change communicators should target messages based on the predominant political ideology of their audience or include both biotic and built infrastructure impacts in their messages to capture wider audiences.
引用
收藏
页码:409 / 422
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Political ideologies and the objective measurement of climate-related risks to coastal resources
    Smith, Jordan W.
    Bitsura-Meszaros, Karly
    Seekamp, Erin
    McCreary, Allie
    Burroughs, Kaitlin
    [J]. JOURNAL OF COASTAL CONSERVATION, 2016, 20 (05) : 409 - 422
  • [2] A Literature Review of Climate-Related Coastal Risks in the Mediterranean, a Climate Change Hotspot
    Sarkar, Nabanita
    Rizzo, Angela
    Vandelli, Vittoria
    Soldati, Mauro
    [J]. SUSTAINABILITY, 2022, 14 (23)
  • [3] Climate-related risks in financial assets
    Campiglio, Emanuele
    Daumas, Louis
    Monnin, Pierre
    von Jagow, Adrian
    [J]. JOURNAL OF ECONOMIC SURVEYS, 2023, 37 (03) : 950 - 992
  • [4] Analysis of Climate-Related Risks for Chile's Coastal Settlements in the ARClim Web Platform
    Winckler, Patricio
    Contreras-Lopez, Manuel
    Garreaud, Rene
    Meza, Francisco
    Larraguibel, Cristian
    Esparza, Cesar
    Gelcich, Stefan
    Falvey, Mark
    Mora, Javiera
    [J]. WATER, 2022, 14 (22)
  • [5] Company Disclosure of Climate-Related Reputation Risks
    Belyea-Tate, Andrew
    [J]. COMPANY AND SECURITIES LAW JOURNAL, 2019, 37 (02): : 82 - 103
  • [6] Pricing climate-related risks in the bond market
    Agliardi, Elettra
    Agliardi, Rossella
    [J]. JOURNAL OF FINANCIAL STABILITY, 2021, 54
  • [7] Pricing climate-related risks of energy investments
    In, Soh Young
    Weyant, John P.
    Manav, Berk
    [J]. RENEWABLE & SUSTAINABLE ENERGY REVIEWS, 2022, 154
  • [8] Climate-related Risks on Agriculture in Demarcated Douro Region
    Rodrigues, Monica
    Monteiro, Ana
    Rocha, Alfredo
    Quenol, Herve
    de Freitas, Jose R.
    [J]. RURAL DEVELOPMENT IN GLOBAL CHANGES, VOL 5, BOOK 2, 2011, 5 (02): : 216 - 220
  • [9] Systemic risks from climate-related disruptions at ports
    Jasper Verschuur
    Elco E. Koks
    Jim W. Hall
    [J]. Nature Climate Change, 2023, 13 : 804 - 806
  • [10] Probabilistic assessment of climate-related impacts and risks in ports
    Lucio, D.
    Lara, J. L.
    Tomas, A.
    Losada, I. J.
    [J]. RELIABILITY ENGINEERING & SYSTEM SAFETY, 2024, 251