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Climate Change Quotes for Posters

This document summarizes 21 foreign studies and 15 local studies on climate change awareness, perceptions, and impacts. Some key findings from the foreign studies include: women and those with less education tend to have lower climate change knowledge; extreme weather events can increase attention to climate change issues; and proximity to climate change impacts and personal experiences influence risk perception. The local studies examined climate change coverage in Philippine newspapers, community resilience projects, and surveys of climate change awareness in the Philippines, South Africa, Nigeria, and among students.

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Pearl Mendoza
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
82 views6 pages

Climate Change Quotes for Posters

This document summarizes 21 foreign studies and 15 local studies on climate change awareness, perceptions, and impacts. Some key findings from the foreign studies include: women and those with less education tend to have lower climate change knowledge; extreme weather events can increase attention to climate change issues; and proximity to climate change impacts and personal experiences influence risk perception. The local studies examined climate change coverage in Philippine newspapers, community resilience projects, and surveys of climate change awareness in the Philippines, South Africa, Nigeria, and among students.

Uploaded by

Pearl Mendoza
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

Foreign studies

[01] Lee K, Gjersoe N, O’Neill S, Barnett J.


Youth perceptions of climate change: a narrative synthesis.
WIREs Clim Change. 2020;11(3):e641. [Link] org/10.1002/wcc.641

[02] UN Women. Explainer: How gender inequality and climate change are
interconnected. UN Women; 2022. Available from:
[Link] news-stories/explainer/2022/02/explainer-how-
genderinequality-and-climate-change-are-interconnected

[03] Ballew M, Marlon J, Leiserowitz A, Maibach E. Gender differences in


public understanding of climate change. Clim Change Commun. 2018.
Available from: [Link]

[04] McCright AM. The effects of gender on climate change knowledge and
concern in the American public. Popul Environ. 2010;32(1):66-87.
[Link] s11111-010-0113-1

[05] McClanahan TR, Cinner JE, Maina J, Graham NAJ, Daw TM, Stead SM,
et al. Conservation action in a changing climate. Conserv Lett. 2008;1(2):53–9.
[Link]
[06] Afjal Hossain Md, Imran Reza Md, Rahman S, Kayes I. Climate change
and its impacts on the livelihoods of the vulnerable people in the Southwestern
Coastal Zone in Bangladesh. In Filho WL, editor. Climate Change and the
Sustainable Use of Water Resources. New York: Springer; 2012:237–59.
[Link]
[07] American Public Health Association. Climate Changes Health: Vulnerable
Populations. Washington, DC. 2021. [Accessed 20 January 2022]. Available
from: https:// [Link]/topics-and-issues/climate-change/ vulnerable-
populations
[08] Priestley RK, Heine Z, Milfont TL. Public understanding of climate
change-related sea-level rise. PLoS One. 2021;16(7):e0254348.
[Link] pone.0254348
[09] Fagan M, Huang C. A look at how people around the world view climate
change. Pew Res Center. 2019. Available from:
[Link]
[10] Shi J, Visschers VHM, Siegrist M. Public perception of climate change:
the importance of knowledge and cultural worldviews. Risk Anal. 2015;35(12):
2183–201. [Link]
[11] Howe PD, Leiserowitz A. Who remembers a hot summer or a cold winter?
The asymmetric effect of beliefs about global warming on perceptions of local
climate conditions in the U.S. Glob Environl Change.
2013;23(6):1488–500. [Link] gloenvcha.2013.09.014
[12] Howe PD. Perceptions of seasonal weather are linked to beliefs about
global climate change: evidence from Norway. Clim Change.
2018;148(4):467–80. [Link] org/10.1007/s10584-018-2210-6
[13] Leiserowitz A, Carman J, Buttermore N, Wang X, Rosenthal S, Marlon J,
et al. International Public
Opinion on Climate Change. New Haven, CT: Yale Program on Climate
Change Communication and Facebook Data for Good at Meta; 2021. Available
from: [Link] international-public-
opinion-on-climate-change-2022/
[14] Lujala P, Lein H, Rød JK. Climate change, natural hazards, and risk
perception: the role of proximity and personal experience. Local Environ.
2015;20(4):489–509. https:// [Link]/10.1080/13549839.2014.887666
[15] Sambrook K, Konstantinidis E, Russell S, Okan Y. The role of personal
experience and prior beliefs in shaping climate change perceptions: a narrative
review. Front Psychol. 2021;12. [Link] fpsyg.2021.669911
[16] Spence A, Poortinga W, Butler C, Pidgeon NF. Perceptions of climate
change and willingness to save energy related to flood experience. Nat Clim
Chang. 2011;1(1):46–9. [Link]
[17] Sisco MR, Bosetti V, Weber EU. When do extreme weather events
generate attention to climate change?
Clim Change. 2017;143(1–2):227–41. [Link] org/10.1007/s10584-017-
1984-2
[18] University Corporation for Atmospheric Research.
Climate Change: Regional Impacts [Internet]. 2021. [Accessed 23 November
2021]. Available from: https:// [Link]/learning-zone/climate-change-
impacts/ regional
[19] Kabir MI, Rahman MB, Smith W, Lusha MAF, Azim S, Milton AH.
Knowledge and perception about climate change and human health: findings
from a baseline survey among vulnerable communities in Bangladesh. BMC
Public Health. 2016;16(1). [Link] s12889-016-2930-3
[20] Lee TM, Markowitz EM, Howe PD, Ko CY, Leiserowitz AA. Predictors
of public climate change awareness and risk perception around the world. Nat
Clim Chang. 2015;5(11):1014–20. [Link] nclimate2728
[21] Ziska L, Crimmins A, Auclair A, DeGrasse S, Garofalo JF, Khan AS, et
al. Food safety, nutrition, and distribution. In: The Impacts of Climate
Change on Human Health in the United States: A Scientific Assessment.
Washington, DC: U.S. Global Change Research Program; 2016.
[Link]
[22] Dawson, V., Carson, K., (2013) Australian secondary school students
understanding of Climate Change. Teaching Science, 59 (3), 9-14
[23] Maponya, P., Mpandeli, S., & Oduniyi, S. (2013). Climate change
awareness in Mpumalanga Province, South Africa. Journal of Agricultural
Science, 5(10), [Link].5539/jas.v5n10p273
[24] Olayinka C. O., Kolawole C. I., Ayodeji O. O., Lekan M. A., Patience F.
T. (2013). Improving Urban Residents’ Awareness of the Impact of Household
Activities on Climate
Change in Lagos State, Nigeria. Journal of Sustainable Development; 6(4)
doi:10.5539/jsd.v6n4p56 URL: [Link]

Local Studies
[01] Piamonte RA, Gravoso R. Research Note: Coverage of climate change
risks in leading Philippine newspapers. Ann Trop Res. 2008;136:125–36.
Available from: http:// [Link]/10.32945/atr3019.2008
[02] Banaguas G, Ramos R, Co M, Glico JM, Fuentebella VA, Regalado AM,
et al. Climate Smart Palawan
Creating Climate Resilience in Calamianes Group of Islands (Busuang, Coron
and Culion). 2020. Available from: [Link]
water-changemaker-awards/submitted-form-media/ documents/climate-smart-
[Link]

Foreign Literature
[01] National Ocean Service. How does climate change affect coral reefs?
[Internet]. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. 2021. [Accessed
31 August 2022]. Available from: [Link]
facts/[Link]
[02] Zaval L, Keenan EA, Johnson EJ, Weber EU. How warm days increase
belief in global warming. Nat Clim Chang.
2014;4(2):143–7. [Link]
[03] Ballew M, Marlon J, Rosenthal S, Gustafson A, Kotcher J, Maibach E, et
al. Do younger generations care more about global warming? New Haven, CT:
Climate Change Communication; 2019. Available from: https://
[Link]/publications/doyounger-generations-care-
more-about-global-warming/
[04] IPCC. Climate Change 2013: The Physical Science Basis. Contribution of
Working Group I to the Fifth Assessment
Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change. Stocker TF, Qin D, Plattner GK, Tignor M, Allen
SK, Boschung J, et al., editors. Cambridge, United
Kingdom and New York, NY: Cambridge University Press; 2013:1585.
Available from: [Link]
assets/uploads/2018/02/WG1AR5_all_final.pdf
[05] Gilman EL, Ellison J, Duke NC, Field C. Threats to mangroves from
climate change and adaptation options: a review. Aquat Bot. 2008;89(2):237–
50.
[Link]
[06] Field CD. Impact of expected climate change on mangroves. In: Asia-
Pacific Symposium on Mangrove Ecosystems. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands;
1995:
75–81. Available from: [Link]
978-94-011-0289-6_10
[07] Mbow C, Rosenzweig C, Barioni LG, Benton TG,
Herrero M, Krishnapillai M, et al. Food Security. In:
Shukla PR, Skea J, Buendia EC, Masson-Delmotte
V, Pörtner HO, Roberts DC, et al., editors. In: Climate Change and Land:
An IPCC special report on climate change, desertification, land
degradation, sustainable land management, food security, and greenhouse
gas fluxes in terrestrial ecosystems. Cambridge University Press; 2019. p.
439. Available from: [Link] org/10.1017/9781009157988.007
[08] Marshall, N. A., Park, S., Howden, S.M., Dowd, A.B., Jakku, E.S. (2013)
Climate change awareness is associated with enhanced adaptive capacity.
Agricultural Systems, 117, 30-34.
[09] Mwalukasa, N. (2013). Agricultural information sources used for climate
change adaptation in Tanzania. Library Review, 62 (4/5): 266 - 292
[10] UNFCCC (2014a). Article 6 - Education Training and Public Awareness.
United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change.
[11] UNFCCC (2014b). The Lima Ministerial Declaration on Education and
Awareness-raising. United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change.

[12] Pandve HT. Global initiatives to prevent climate change. Indian J Occup
Environ Med 2008; 12:96-7.
[13] Young people should have active role in combating climate change Ban.
Available from [Link]
NewsID=27670andCr=YouthandCr1=
(10/06/2009)[Link]
NewsID=27670andCr=YouthandCr1=(10/06/2009)
Local Literature
[01] Yumul GP, Cruz NA, Servando NT, Dimalanta CB.
Extreme weather events and related disasters in the Philippines, 2004–08: a sign
of what climate change will mean? Disasters. 2011;35(2):362–82. [Link]
org/10.1111/j.1467-7717.2010.01216.x
[02] Claudio C, Rebuelta-Teh X, Quiroga M. Climate Change Adaptation Best
Practices in the Philippines. Manila,
Philippines: Department of Environment and Natural Resources; 2012.
Available from: [Link] [Link]/images/DL_Files/Climate
Change Adaptation Best [Link]
[03] Cabrestante M, Martinico-Perez MF. State of the Environment 2015
Updates, Province of Palawan (UNESCO Man and Biosphere Reserve),
Philippines.
Devanadera N, Matulac JL, Villena A, editors. Puerto
Princesa City, Philippines: Palawan Council for Sustainable Development
Staff; 2015:1–188. Available from: [Link]
[04] International Development Research Centre (IDRC). Parts of Philippines
may submerge due to global warming. 2015. [Accessed 30 October 2021].
Available from: [Link]
releases/2015/10/[Link]
[05] Palawan Biosphere Reserve, Philippines. UNESCO; 1990. Available from:
[Link] aspac/palawan

Common questions

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Local perceptions of seasonal weather variability are intricately linked to beliefs about global climate change. Individuals often interpret deviations from typical weather patterns as evidence supporting their views on climate change. For those aware of and accepting climate science, unusual weather is often seen as direct confirmation of global trends. Conversely, skeptics may attribute such variability to natural and cyclical weather changes, dismissing the link to human-induced climate shifts . Personal and historical experience with local weather patterns therefore plays a critical role in shaping overarching climate change beliefs, influencing both acknowledgment and action .

Gender differences influence public understanding and concern about climate change significantly. Women tend to show higher levels of concern and a greater willingness to act against climate change compared to men, partly due to differences in risk perception and empathy for affected individuals . Furthermore, knowledge gaps exist, where males often self-report higher climate change knowledge, though this does not necessarily translate to greater concern. This variation in understanding and concern is a critical factor in shaping both individual and community responses to climate change initiatives .

Cultural worldviews are crucial in shaping public perceptions of climate change. They influence how individuals interpret scientific information and environmental phenomena. People with hierarchical and individualistic worldviews may downplay climate risks, often aligning with political ideologies that emphasize economic growth over environmental regulations. In contrast, those with egalitarian and communitarian outlooks may perceive climate change as a significant threat, prioritizing community well-being and sustainability . Cultural beliefs thus mediate acceptance of climate science and willingness to support environmental policies .

Extreme weather events significantly influence the attention paid to climate change by acting as tangible demonstrations of climate variability and impact. They draw public and media attention, which can increase awareness and urgency regarding climate policies. Following such events, there is often an increased demand for scientific explanations, leading to heightened awareness and concern. These events serve as catalysts for policy discussions and can prompt immediate adaptive actions from affected communities . However, without sustained communication efforts, this attention may wane over time .

Climate change severely impacts the livelihoods of vulnerable populations in the Southwestern Coastal Zone of Bangladesh through increased flooding, salinity intrusion, and erosion. These changes affect agriculture, fisheries, and water resources, leading to food insecurity and economic instability. Additionally, the pressure from environmental changes exacerbates poverty conditions, making adaptation more challenging for these communities . The compounded effects of climate and socio-economic vulnerabilities require targeted adaptation strategies to improve resilience and sustainability .

Youth perceptions of climate change are generally more progressive than those of older generations. Younger individuals tend to acknowledge the existence and human impact of climate change more readily and show greater concern for its future consequences. This is partly due to their access to diverse information channels and education focused on environmental issues . Moreover, younger generations are typically more supportive of policies aimed at mitigating climate change and are more active in advocating for sustainable practices .

Personal experience with local weather events significantly affects beliefs about global climate change. Individuals who experience extreme weather are more likely to acknowledge climate change as real and pressing. This effect is due to the psychological impact of witnessing climate-related anomalies, which makes the abstract concept of climate change more concrete and immediate . Such experiences can increase the perception of risk and urgency, although they might also reinforce existing beliefs, leading to varying interpretations of climate data .

Public misconceptions about sea-level rise have significant implications for climate change policy and adaptation strategies. Underestimating or misunderstanding the risks can lead to inadequate preparation and support for necessary infrastructure investments. It may also affect community engagement in mitigation efforts and hinder the effectiveness of communication strategies aimed at fostering proactive adaptation measures. This gap between perception and reality can reduce the urgency with which necessary changes are implemented . Correcting these misconceptions is crucial for policy acceptance and effective climate action .

Climate change awareness is strongly associated with enhanced adaptive capacity within communities. Awareness promotes understanding of environmental risks and supports the development of strategies for mitigation and adaptation. Communities that are informed and aware are better equipped to implement adaptive measures, such as sustainable agricultural practices and improved resource management, which can mitigate the adverse effects of climate change . This awareness also fosters community resilience by encouraging collective action and policy support for sustainable development .

Common factors predicting public climate change awareness and risk perception globally include education level, media exposure, and environmental literacy. Higher education levels correlate with greater awareness and understanding of climate science. Media exposure, especially to objective scientific reporting, enhances recognition of climate risks. Cultural context also plays a role, with cultural worldviews influencing the acceptance of environmental risks. Additionally, experiencing the direct impacts of climate change increases awareness and concern, prompting individuals to perceive a higher personal risk . These predictors vary by region, influenced by local economic and social conditions .

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