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A life history approach to perceptions of global climate change risk: young adults’ experiences about impacts, causes, and solutions

Richard D. Besel, Krista Burke and Vana Christos

Journal of Risk Research, 2017, vol. 20, issue 1, 61-75

Abstract: Although the general acceptance of human-influenced global climate change within the technical sphere of science is important to consider, public perceptions of global climate change risks, impacts, causes, and solutions are as important to policy actions as scientific findings. Yet, studies analyzing climate change risk perceptions suffer from a number of limitations or use only a handful of approaches. Using a limited life history approach, this article answers calls for additional qualitative approaches in risk perception research. This article (1) introduces risk perception researchers to the limited life history method; (2) discovers that young adults articulate climate change solutions at the individual level, often as consumers, and blend their responses to climate change risks and advocacy for solutions with a general, environmentally friendly orientation, a ‘green posture;’ and (3) contends the key sources informing young adults’ perceptions about climate change risk have changed significantly from previous studies.

Date: 2017
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DOI: 10.1080/13669877.2015.1017830

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