Trust in Climate Scientists and Political Ideology: A 26-Country Analysis

Amanda Remsö, Justus Schmidt, Sandra Geiger, Bojana Većkalov, Živa Krajnc, Isobel Laughton, Mariam Shavgulidze, Emma Renström, Kai Ruggeri

Research output: Working paperPreprint

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Abstract

Trust in climate scientists is critical for public awareness and engagement in mitigating
climate change. Previous research has shown that right-wing political ideology is associated
with lower trust in climate scientists, yet the predominant focus on Western countries raises
questions about the universality of this relationship. Addressing this gap in our preregistered
study, we analyze cross-sectional, secondary data across 26 countries from all inhabited
continents (N = 10,646). While observing generally high trust, right-leaning individuals
reported lower trust in climate scientists compared to those further to the left. However, we
find considerable differences in this association across countries, with Anglophone countries
showing the strongest association. Contrary to popularly motivated reasoning accounts,
education did not moderate this relationship. The findings highlight the consistency of the
political ideology-trust in climate scientists relationship across 26 countries but also
underscore overlooked variations outside Western contexts.
Original languageEnglish
DOIs
Publication statusSubmitted - 2024-Mar-25

Swedish Standard Keywords

  • Political Science (506)

Keywords

  • climate change
  • climate scientists
  • multi-country
  • political ideology,
  • trust

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