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Eco-reproductive concerns in the age of climate change
by
Leong Kit Ling
, Schneider-Mayerson, Matthew
in
Carbon
/ Carbon footprint
/ Children
/ Climate change
/ Climate change mitigation
/ Demography
/ Environmental impact
/ Environmental psychology
/ Environmental research
/ Environmental sociology
/ Footprint analysis
/ Mitigation
/ Psychology
/ Scholarships & fellowships
/ Sociology
/ Statistical analysis
/ Surveying
/ Young adults
2020
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Eco-reproductive concerns in the age of climate change
by
Leong Kit Ling
, Schneider-Mayerson, Matthew
in
Carbon
/ Carbon footprint
/ Children
/ Climate change
/ Climate change mitigation
/ Demography
/ Environmental impact
/ Environmental psychology
/ Environmental research
/ Environmental sociology
/ Footprint analysis
/ Mitigation
/ Psychology
/ Scholarships & fellowships
/ Sociology
/ Statistical analysis
/ Surveying
/ Young adults
2020
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While trying to remove the title from your shelf something went wrong :( Kindly try again later!
Do you wish to request the book?
Eco-reproductive concerns in the age of climate change
by
Leong Kit Ling
, Schneider-Mayerson, Matthew
in
Carbon
/ Carbon footprint
/ Children
/ Climate change
/ Climate change mitigation
/ Demography
/ Environmental impact
/ Environmental psychology
/ Environmental research
/ Environmental sociology
/ Footprint analysis
/ Mitigation
/ Psychology
/ Scholarships & fellowships
/ Sociology
/ Statistical analysis
/ Surveying
/ Young adults
2020
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Journal Article
Eco-reproductive concerns in the age of climate change
2020
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Overview
Media reports and public polls suggest that young people in many countries are increasingly factoring climate change into their reproductive choices, but empirical evidence about this phenomenon is lacking. This article reviews the scholarship on this subject and discusses the results of the first empirical study focused on it, a quantitative and qualitative survey of 607 US-Americans between the ages of 27 and 45. While 59.8% of respondents reported being “very” or “extremely concerned” about the carbon footprint of procreation, 96.5% of respondents were “very” or “extremely concerned” about the well-being of their existing, expected, or hypothetical children in a climate-changed world. This was largely due to an overwhelmingly negative expectation of the future with climate change. Younger respondents were more concerned about the climate impacts their children would experience than older respondents, and there was no statistically significant difference between the eco-reproductive concerns of male and female respondents. These and other results are situated within scholarship about growing climate concern in the USA, the concept of the carbon footprint, the carbon footprint of procreation, individual actions in response to climate change, temporal perceptions of climate change, and expectations about the future in the USA. Potential implications for future research in environmental psychology, environmental sociology, the sociology of reproduction, demography, and climate mitigation are discussed.
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V
Subject
/ Children
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