Using the three-pillar model of sustainability to understand lay reactions to climate policy: A multilevel approach

Public support for climate policy is necessary to enact the large-scale changes needed to mitigate climate change. We use the three-pillar model of sustainability as a conceptual framework to examine how individuals evaluate climate policies and how these evaluations predict policy support. We consider individuals’ evaluations of 1) environmental impacts (i.e., perceived policy effectiveness), 2) economic impacts, and 3) social impacts of policies. We use multilevel modeling to disentangle variance in policy support attributable to between-person differences (i.e., aggregated policy support) and within-person variations across policies. First, we fit a multilevel factor model to our dataset (Nobs = 1056) to identify whether the factor structure of the three-pillar model at both the between-person and within-person levels of analysis. The three-pillar model emerged at the within-person level. In contrast, items instead loaded onto two factors at the between-person level: benefits and harms. Thus, we created within- and between-person constructs matching these factors. Results from multilevel regressions suggest that a) individuals who anticipate more benefits and fewer harms of climate policies (as a set) also tend to report greater aggregated support for climate change policies, and b) anticipating environmental benefits, economic impacts and social impacts to be above average for a certain policy (relative to other policies) predicts greater support for that policy. Our work suggests the relevance of differentiating between who is most likely to support climate policies in general (i.e., between-person differences) as well as policy-specific evaluations associated with support for some policies over others (i.e. within-person variation in support).

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Work Title Using the three-pillar model of sustainability to understand lay reactions to climate policy: A multilevel approach
Access
Open Access
Creators
  1. Nathaniel Geiger
  2. Janet K. Swim
  3. Lizbeth Benson
Keyword
  1. Three-pillar model of sustainability
  2. Policy support
  3. Environmental impacts
  4. Social impacts
  5. Economic impacts
  6. Prospect theory
  7. Multilevel modeling
License In Copyright (Rights Reserved)
Work Type Article
Publisher
  1. Environmental Science and Policy
Publication Date October 11, 2021
Publisher Identifier (DOI)
  1. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envsci.2021.09.023
Deposited August 03, 2022

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Version 1
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  • Created
  • Added Within_and_Between_Predictors_ESP_for_sharing.docx
  • Added Creator Nathaniel Geiger
  • Added Creator Janet K. Swim
  • Added Creator Lizbeth Benson
  • Published
  • Updated Work Title, Keyword, Subtitle, and 1 more Show Changes
    Work Title
    • Using the three-pillar model of sustainability to understand lay reactions to climate policy
    • Using the three-pillar model of sustainability to understand lay reactions to climate policy: A multilevel approach
    Keyword
    • Three-pillar model of sustainability, Policy support, Environmental impacts, Social impacts, Economic impacts, Prospect theory, Multilevel modeling
    Subtitle
    • A multilevel approach
    Publication Date
    • 2021-12-01
    • 2021-10-11