The impact of perceived partisanship on climate policy support: A conceptual replication and extension of the temporal framing effect

Publikation: Beiträge in ZeitschriftenZeitschriftenaufsätzeForschungbegutachtet

Standard

The impact of perceived partisanship on climate policy support: A conceptual replication and extension of the temporal framing effect. / Herberz, Mario; Brosch, Tobias; Hahnel, Ulf J.J.
in: Journal of Environmental Psychology, Jahrgang 86, 101972, 03.2023.

Publikation: Beiträge in ZeitschriftenZeitschriftenaufsätzeForschungbegutachtet

Harvard

APA

Vancouver

Bibtex

@article{db489f1001894cf78031b843c08ba7b6,
title = "The impact of perceived partisanship on climate policy support: A conceptual replication and extension of the temporal framing effect",
abstract = "Bridging the political divide between liberals and conservatives is one of the biggest challenges in reaching broad public support of climate policies. Research has suggested that framing climate policies with respect to the past may reduce opposition by political conservatives, but recent attempts to replicate this effect have failed. A new perspective on these inconsistent findings may be offered by taking the influence of temporal framing on individuals' perception of the messenger into account. The present work investigated how implicit cues contained in temporal message framing as well as explicit political identity cues shape the perceived political orientation of a messenger and subsequent climate policy support by partisans. Across three experiments (Ntotal = 2012), we found that past (vs. future) framing and conservative (vs. liberal) party affiliation independently contributed to the messenger being perceived as more conservative. Past framing and conservative party affiliation increased endorsement of the messenger and the message by conservatives, but decreased endorsement by liberals. However, past framing and conservative party affiliation independently increased conservatives{\textquoteright} climate policy support, with mixed effects on liberals. Moreover, a temporal framing effect only emerged when messenger party affiliation was made explicit, suggesting that activating individuals' political identity facilitates the integration of implicit identity cues contained in temporal framings. We discuss the theoretical implications of our integrated account for the observation of partisan effects and reassess the potential of temporal framings to reduce the political divide on climate change.",
keywords = "Climate policy support, Partisan effects, Political divide, Temporal message framing, Psychology, Sustainability sciences, Management & Economics",
author = "Mario Herberz and Tobias Brosch and Hahnel, {Ulf J.J.}",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2023 The Authors",
year = "2023",
month = mar,
doi = "10.1016/j.jenvp.2023.101972",
language = "English",
volume = "86",
journal = "Journal of Environmental Psychology",
issn = "0272-4944",
publisher = "Elsevier B.V.",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The impact of perceived partisanship on climate policy support

T2 - A conceptual replication and extension of the temporal framing effect

AU - Herberz, Mario

AU - Brosch, Tobias

AU - Hahnel, Ulf J.J.

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2023 The Authors

PY - 2023/3

Y1 - 2023/3

N2 - Bridging the political divide between liberals and conservatives is one of the biggest challenges in reaching broad public support of climate policies. Research has suggested that framing climate policies with respect to the past may reduce opposition by political conservatives, but recent attempts to replicate this effect have failed. A new perspective on these inconsistent findings may be offered by taking the influence of temporal framing on individuals' perception of the messenger into account. The present work investigated how implicit cues contained in temporal message framing as well as explicit political identity cues shape the perceived political orientation of a messenger and subsequent climate policy support by partisans. Across three experiments (Ntotal = 2012), we found that past (vs. future) framing and conservative (vs. liberal) party affiliation independently contributed to the messenger being perceived as more conservative. Past framing and conservative party affiliation increased endorsement of the messenger and the message by conservatives, but decreased endorsement by liberals. However, past framing and conservative party affiliation independently increased conservatives’ climate policy support, with mixed effects on liberals. Moreover, a temporal framing effect only emerged when messenger party affiliation was made explicit, suggesting that activating individuals' political identity facilitates the integration of implicit identity cues contained in temporal framings. We discuss the theoretical implications of our integrated account for the observation of partisan effects and reassess the potential of temporal framings to reduce the political divide on climate change.

AB - Bridging the political divide between liberals and conservatives is one of the biggest challenges in reaching broad public support of climate policies. Research has suggested that framing climate policies with respect to the past may reduce opposition by political conservatives, but recent attempts to replicate this effect have failed. A new perspective on these inconsistent findings may be offered by taking the influence of temporal framing on individuals' perception of the messenger into account. The present work investigated how implicit cues contained in temporal message framing as well as explicit political identity cues shape the perceived political orientation of a messenger and subsequent climate policy support by partisans. Across three experiments (Ntotal = 2012), we found that past (vs. future) framing and conservative (vs. liberal) party affiliation independently contributed to the messenger being perceived as more conservative. Past framing and conservative party affiliation increased endorsement of the messenger and the message by conservatives, but decreased endorsement by liberals. However, past framing and conservative party affiliation independently increased conservatives’ climate policy support, with mixed effects on liberals. Moreover, a temporal framing effect only emerged when messenger party affiliation was made explicit, suggesting that activating individuals' political identity facilitates the integration of implicit identity cues contained in temporal framings. We discuss the theoretical implications of our integrated account for the observation of partisan effects and reassess the potential of temporal framings to reduce the political divide on climate change.

KW - Climate policy support

KW - Partisan effects

KW - Political divide

KW - Temporal message framing

KW - Psychology

KW - Sustainability sciences, Management & Economics

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85148712184&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1016/j.jenvp.2023.101972

DO - 10.1016/j.jenvp.2023.101972

M3 - Journal articles

AN - SCOPUS:85148712184

VL - 86

JO - Journal of Environmental Psychology

JF - Journal of Environmental Psychology

SN - 0272-4944

M1 - 101972

ER -

DOI