Acceptance of climate change and climate refugee policy in Australia and New Zealand: The case against political polarisation

Document Type

Journal Article

Publication Title

Climatic Change

Volume

169

Issue

3-4

Publisher

Springer

School

School of Arts and Humanities

Funders

Australian National University Research School of Psychology

Comments

Stanley, S. K., Ng Tseung-Wong, C., Leviston, Z., & Walker, I. (2021). Acceptance of climate change and climate refugee policy in Australia and New Zealand: The case against political polarisation. Climatic Change, 169(3-4), article 26.

https://doi.org/10.1007/s10584-021-03278-8

Abstract

Despite the seriousness of climate change, political polarisation and right-wing denial of climate change is frequently blamed for stalling effective climate policy. One concerning consequence of climate change is the displacement of people. We identify demographic correlates of acceptance of climate change and support for climate refugee policy within two nations likely to become early recipients of climate-driven migrants: Australia (N = 5110) and New Zealand (N = 5039). Political orientation is the strongest demographic correlate of climate change denial and climate refugee policy support, but deeper analysis shows that while support is highest amongst left-wing partisans, almost all voting groups on average accept climate change and climate migration policy. We argue that current high levels of support indicate potential for cross-partisan policy solutions in both Australia and New Zealand. We also caution about ways polarisation may deepen as we approach a climate refugee crisis.

DOI

10.1007/s10584-021-03278-8

Access Rights

subscription content

Share

 
COinS