4.2 Article

Public Opinion, Vulnerability, and Living with Extraction on Ecuador's Oil Frontier Where the Debate Between Development and Environmentalism Gets Personal

Journal

COMPARATIVE POLITICS
Volume 49, Issue 2, Pages 231-+

Publisher

SHERIDAN PRESS
DOI: 10.5129/001041517820201404

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While economic structural arguments have long explained pro-environment attitudes in affluent, developed countries, these arguments are insufficient in poorer developing nations, where citizens may feel more vulnerable to ecosystem change. Using a nation-wide survey of environmental dispositions in Ecuador, we argue that vulnerability to environmental changes and proximity to resource extraction are instrumental in shaping environmental concern. We claim that vulnerability to environmental change enhances concern over the environment. We also argue that a respondent's proximity to where extraction has occurred or is under consideration also increases their environmental concern. Our survey analysis strongly supports our hypotheses, leading us to conclude that attitudes based on self-interest rather than normative values may be easier for policymakers to draw upon in devising policy reforms.

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