HIGHLIGHTS
SUMMARY
This expectation was based on the results of three overlapping bodies of research: research about relationships between political orientation and beliefs about climate change, research about relationship between political orientation and religious belief, and research about relationships between religiosity and beliefs about climate change. The authors focused on climate change-induced distress because such distress can prompt people to take action to mitigate climate change (Verplanken and amp; Roy, 2013; Verplanken et_al, 2020), a possibility the authors discuss below. Much of this research has been done in the USA (e_g, 48% of the studies . . .
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