Trust in Scientists on Climate Change and Vaccines

On climate change and other topics, conservatives have taken positions at odds with a strong scientific consensus. Claims that this indicates a broad conservative distrust of science have been countered by assertions that while conservatives might oppose the scientific consensus on climate change or...

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Main Authors: Lawrence C. Hamilton, Joel Hartter, Kei Saito
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2015-08-01
Series:SAGE Open
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2158244015602752
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spelling doaj-76e6a53601564271b40bfb9a37b731532020-11-25T03:49:52ZengSAGE PublishingSAGE Open2158-24402015-08-01510.1177/215824401560275210.1177_2158244015602752Trust in Scientists on Climate Change and VaccinesLawrence C. Hamilton0Joel Hartter1Kei Saito2University of New Hampshire, Durham, USAUniversity of Colorado, Boulder, USAUniversity of New Hampshire, Durham, USAOn climate change and other topics, conservatives have taken positions at odds with a strong scientific consensus. Claims that this indicates a broad conservative distrust of science have been countered by assertions that while conservatives might oppose the scientific consensus on climate change or evolution, liberals oppose scientists on some other domains such as vaccines. Evidence for disproportionately liberal bias against science on vaccines has been largely anecdotal, however. Here, we test this proposition of opposite biases using 2014 survey data from Oregon and New Hampshire. Across vaccine as well as climate change questions on each of these two surveys, we find that Democrats are most likely to say they trust scientists for information, and Tea Party supporters are least likely, contradicting the proposition of opposite bias. Moreover, partisan divisions tend to widen with education. Theoretical explanations that have been offered for liberal trust or conservative distrust of science in other specific domains such as climate change or environmental protection fit less well with these results on vaccines. Given the much different content of climate change and vaccine issues, the common political pattern appears more consistent with hypotheses of broader ideological divisions on acceptance of science.https://doi.org/10.1177/2158244015602752
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lawrence C. Hamilton
Joel Hartter
Kei Saito
spellingShingle Lawrence C. Hamilton
Joel Hartter
Kei Saito
Trust in Scientists on Climate Change and Vaccines
SAGE Open
author_facet Lawrence C. Hamilton
Joel Hartter
Kei Saito
author_sort Lawrence C. Hamilton
title Trust in Scientists on Climate Change and Vaccines
title_short Trust in Scientists on Climate Change and Vaccines
title_full Trust in Scientists on Climate Change and Vaccines
title_fullStr Trust in Scientists on Climate Change and Vaccines
title_full_unstemmed Trust in Scientists on Climate Change and Vaccines
title_sort trust in scientists on climate change and vaccines
publisher SAGE Publishing
series SAGE Open
issn 2158-2440
publishDate 2015-08-01
description On climate change and other topics, conservatives have taken positions at odds with a strong scientific consensus. Claims that this indicates a broad conservative distrust of science have been countered by assertions that while conservatives might oppose the scientific consensus on climate change or evolution, liberals oppose scientists on some other domains such as vaccines. Evidence for disproportionately liberal bias against science on vaccines has been largely anecdotal, however. Here, we test this proposition of opposite biases using 2014 survey data from Oregon and New Hampshire. Across vaccine as well as climate change questions on each of these two surveys, we find that Democrats are most likely to say they trust scientists for information, and Tea Party supporters are least likely, contradicting the proposition of opposite bias. Moreover, partisan divisions tend to widen with education. Theoretical explanations that have been offered for liberal trust or conservative distrust of science in other specific domains such as climate change or environmental protection fit less well with these results on vaccines. Given the much different content of climate change and vaccine issues, the common political pattern appears more consistent with hypotheses of broader ideological divisions on acceptance of science.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2158244015602752
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