This is a guest post by ClimateDenierRoundup.
Two new studies on denial came out last week. While theyโre not exactly breaking new ground, confirmation is alwaysย nice.
The first isย a literature reviewย led by Stanfordโs Gabrielle Wong-Parodi that examines psychological studies on climate denial in the U.S. and found four big lessons for appealing to conservatives. Although the press release is promisingly headlined as โpathways to changing the minds of climate deniers,โ we remain skeptical that thereโs any real way to change a denierโs mind. After all, if they were open to change, they wouldnโt beย deniers!
Nonetheless, the findings are still helpful and relevant for communicating with the cohort that we like to think of as a denierโs family. No amount of carefully crafted climate messaging is going to undo the results of a lifetime of Rush Limbaugh and Fox News indoctrination, but the wife and children of a denier, who are only second-hand exposed to that steady stream of politicized content, may beย reachable.
How? The study found four effective communication approaches in the literature. The first is to frame climate solutions as ways to uphold the status quo, appealing to the conservative desire for stability. That would look like a message along these lines: โSociety has been built and developed over thousands of years in a very particular climate. Now thatโs changing, and our coastlines, infrastructure, agricultural, and other systems are going to have to change โ unless we get climate change underย control.โ
The second is to appeal to the Judeo-Christian affinity for purity by focusing on preserving the Earthโs beauty, as opposed to how weโre befouling it. Messages that center on saving our beautiful landscapes from dirty fossil fuels and caring for Godโs creation provide a way for conservative (Christians) to align environmental concerns with their religiousย beliefs.
The third avenue is to have trusted messengers talk about the scientific consensus, reinforcing the fact that scientists are nearly unanimous about the impacts of burning fossilย fuels.
Lastly, the study found it was effective to have people talk about their own values and position on climate before laying out the evidence. By priming people to think about themselves before thinking about climate, it makes it easier for them to incorporate climate information in a way that compliments their worldview, instead of clashing with it. Thatโs obviously difficult to do when communicating with the public writ large, but is an easy way to begin an actual conversation with a particular person. Laying out our own personal beliefs and biases makes us conscious of them, and can therefore lessen the subconscious influence they have in theย discussion.
The other new studyย focuses on the third suggestion, talking about the consensus on climate science. It found strong evidence that having college-level biology students engage with the originalย Cook โ13 97 percent paper, and the follow-up โ16 study of the various consensus studiesย raises their estimate of the consensus to more closely reflect reality, as well as making them more worried about climate change and more confident in their own ability to talk about the consensus with otherย people.
That said, the sample size was tiny: only 11 students. And none of them were in denial to begin with. But still, it presents a compelling picture of the power of the consensus. Before reading the studies, the students on average thought the consensus was 75 percent, with some thinking it was as low as 10 percent. After engaging with consensus studies, that number climbed to its correct range of 90-100ย percent.
Taken together, these two studies show that whether youโre talking to curious students or their skeptical parents, itโs still vital to reinforce the fact that nearly all the scientists who study the issue understand that human activity is causing climate change. And for conservatives, it helps if that message comes from someone who speaks to theirย values.
Main image:ย Sign for the May 1, 2018 LBJ Libraryย talk from climate scientist Dr. Katharine Hayhoe, an evangelical Christian, about how climate change is affecting Texas.ย Credit:ย LBJ Library photo by Jay Godwin, publicย domain
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