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Environmental protection is more important to European citizens of all political persuasions than economic growth: A 14-country study in the marine context
Arato, J.; White, M.P.; Davison, S.M.C.; Pahl, S.; Taylor, T.; Krainz, M.; Geiger, S.J.; Kellett, P.; McMeel, O.; Fleming, L.E. (2024). Environmental protection is more important to European citizens of all political persuasions than economic growth: A 14-country study in the marine context. Mar. Pollut. Bull. 207: 116845. https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.marpolbul.2024.116845
In: Marine Pollution Bulletin. Macmillan: London. ISSN 0025-326X; e-ISSN 1879-3363, more
Peer reviewed article  

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Keyword
    Marine/Coastal
Author keywords
    Blue growth; Marine environmental protection; Oceans and human health; Representative citizen surveys; Second-order beliefs

Authors  Top 
  • Arato, J.
  • White, M.P.
  • Davison, S.M.C.
  • Pahl, S.
  • Taylor, T.
  • Krainz, M.
  • Geiger, S.J.
  • Kellett, P., more
  • McMeel, O., more
  • Fleming, L.E.

Abstract
    To focus on voters' priorities, Bill Clinton's campaign famously used the slogan, “It's the economy stupid.” With growing environmental crises, is this still true? We explored this issue for the marine sector, using representatively-weighted survey data from 14 European countries (N = 11,130). Citizens were asked about their own and policy makers' (perceived) preferences for marine-related economic, environmental, and human health policy goals. Results found the public consistently prioritised environmental protection and, to a lesser extent, health over economic growth. However, the public believed that policy makers cared less about the environment and health, but more about the economy than they did themselves. These patterns were consistent across all countries, all points of the political spectrum, and among coastal and inland residents. Marine policy makers who care about public opinion, may want to start considering that, at least for the European public, it is increasingly about “the environment, stupid!”.

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