4.7 Article

OK Boomer: A decade of generational differences in feelings about climate change

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ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2022.102479

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Intergenerational justice; Climate change engagement; Discussing climate change; Climate emotions; Climate change impacts

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This research examines the emotions towards climate change among different generations and finds that younger generations, including Millennials and iGeneration, experience greater worry, anger, and guilt about climate change compared to older generations. The emotions have been increasing over the past decade, leading to more frequent discussions about climate change among the youngest generations. These findings highlight the significance of emotions in motivating individuals to address climate change.
The emergence of concern about and evidence of climate change has been argued to create a cultural milieu unique to the Millennial generation (born between 1981 and 1996) and iGeneration (aka iGens or Generation Z born after 1997). The present research tested a) claims of unique angst about climate change among younger versus older generations, b) growing generational discrepancies over time in emotions about climate change, c) generational differences for several emotions about climate change, and d) the implications of these emotions for motivating people to discuss climate change with others, potentially aiding coping with climate change and facilitating action to address climate change. Survey data gathered from 2010 to 2019 of a representative sample of United States residents (N = 22,468) document greater increases in worry about climate change and, to a lesser degree, anger and guilt about climate change, within the two youngest generations relative to changes among Generation X, Baby Boomers, and the Silent and Greatest Generations. Although generational differences were small and suggest overstatements of unique effects for younger generations, increases in younger generations' emotions transform into the two youngest generations reporting the strongest emotions in 2019. Over ten years, these differential shifts in emotions explain more substantial increases in the frequency of discussing climate in the youngest generations.

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