Abstract
This study investigates how the grid-group two-dimensional cultural theory (CT) of Douglas and Wildavsky, demographic attributes, and partisan identification are associated with environmentalism in Taiwan, in comparison to the Weather, Society, and Government survey collected in the United States. Results reveal that partisan identification better explains environmental attitudes and concerns in Taiwan, but its explanatory power is not comprehensive. Gender and age explain environmental concerns in Taiwan but not environmental attitudes. The impact of CT on environmentalism appears in the Taiwanese environmentalist’s group but not in the public, whereas CT has satisfactory power in explaining environmentalism in the United States.
Acknowledgments
Many Thanks to the Center for Risk & Crisis Management at University of Oklahoma for generously sharing their data.
Notes
1. In the followings, cultural biases and worldviews will be used interchangeably. Both terms refer to the four cultural biases/worldviews divided by the grid-group two-dimensional framework.
2. Political ideology in the following discussion refers to the liberal-conservative spectrum often used in the U.S context instead of global ideology.
3. (Chi-square = 3547.610, df = 77, p=.00; CFI =.812; TLI =.767; RMSEA =.000).