Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-lnqnp Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-22T15:56:40.237Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Do environmental preferences in wealthy nations persist in times of crisis? The European environmental attitudes (2008-2017)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 March 2019

Cotta Benedetta*
Affiliation:
Faculty of Sustainability, Leuphana Universität Lüneburg, Luneburg, Niedersachsen, Germany
Memoli Vincenzo
Affiliation:
Università degli Studi di Catania, Catania, Italy
*
*Corresponding author. E-mail: [email protected]

Abstract

How do economic recessions affect European citizens’ attitudes towards environmental policies? In this article we investigate the attitudes of European citizens towards environmental protection considering its importance both at individual and country levels and adopting a longitudinal view. In light of the existing research on the link between pro-environmental attitudes and economic affluence of societies, including Ronald Inglehart’s theory of post-materialism, we hypothesise that levels of economic well-being as well as trust in political institutions are important drivers of Europeans’ attitudes towards environmental protection. Taking into consideration some macroeconomic indicators and the environmental attitude of public opinion, our main results show that even in time of crises, citizens’ pro-environmental attitudes persist in terms of importance, both at country and individual levels.

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © Società Italiana di Scienza Politica 2019

Introduction

On 21 June 2018, the Euro-group that coordinates the European Union (EU) member states’ adoption of the euro currency agreed to phase out financial aid to Greece, which also posed an end to the sovereign debt crisis in the Eurozone countries (The Guardian, 2018). This decision marks an important step in the recent history of the EU, since the global crisesFootnote 1 of 2008. While it is still too early to understand how this decision will change policy directions across the EU, we can analyse whether and how, over the past decade, the global crises have had repercussions for European policy-making and public opinion’s attitudes. In doing so, we examine the citizens’ attitudes of the EU member statesFootnote 2 on environmental protection, considered as a leading concern of EU’s policy-making (see Zito, Reference Zito2005; Kelemen and Vogel, Reference Kelemen and Vogel2010).

It is particularly relevant to study how the global crises affected environmental attitudes and policies in the EU because the uptake of European measures for environmental protection has historically depended upon the economic developments of the EU member states (Commission of the European Communities, 1973; Hey, Reference Hey2005). Initially, the range of the European environmental legislative and policy pieces was limited to specific environmental problems and served economic purposes (Lenschow, Reference Lenschow2010). In the 1990s, the promotion of European environmental legislation was constrained by the reluctance of some EU member states to adopt the objectives contained in the Fifth Environmental Action Programme, as well as by the ‘pending economic crisis and the difficulties in ratifying the Maastricht Treaty’ (Hey, Reference Hey2005: 24).

The relationship between environmental protection and economic goals in policy-making has been well studied. A first branch of studies focussed on the impact of economic measures on the promotion of environmental policies. At the end of the 19th century, classical economists such as Malthus (Reference Malthus.1878), de Sismondi (Reference de Sismondi1847), and Mill (Reference Mill1848) identified a link between economic prosperity and environmental issues. In recent times, Grossman and Krueger (Reference Grossman and Krueger1995) observed that low-income countries had initial lower levels of environmental protection, but as wealth increased so did environmental quality. Furthermore, scholars investigating the impact of the 2008 economic and financial crises on the adoption of European environmental legislation and policy instruments acknowledged an existing relationship between economy and environment. Burns and Tobin (Reference Burns and Tobin2016) developed a ‘toolkit’ to integrate measures of environmental change in terms of budget cuts, policy outputs, and policy outcomes resulting from the global crises. Furthermore, Falkner (Reference Falkner2016a; Reference Falkner2016b) assessed the impact of the ongoing crises in nine EU policies and pointed out that the financial pressures and resulting austerity measures adopted in the EU between 2008 and the early 2015 pushed the member countries to cut public budgets, with consequences for EU climate and energy policies (Falkner, Reference Falkner2016a).

Moreover, the relationship between environmental issues and economic prosperity has been extensively researched by public opinion scholars. Many studies from the literature focussed their analysis on the environment–economy nexus by adopting individuals’ perceptions and public attitudes lenses. They subsequently recognised that citizens attributed importance to environmental protection issues subject to socio-political and demographic factors (Van Liere and Dunlap, Reference Van Liere and Dunlap1980). Studies also found a correlation between increased levels of economic well-being and concern for the quality of environment (Dunlap and Scarce, Reference Dunlap and Scarce1991; Plombon, Reference Plombon2011; Cato, Reference Cato2011). Furthermore, several studies focussed on the relationship between individual needs and public attention towards policy issues. Building upon Maslow’s (Reference Maslow1943) hierarchy of needs, which suggests that in wealthier countries individuals turn their attention towards environmental protection (Kemmelmeier et al., Reference Kemmelmeier, Krol and Kim2002; Plombon, Reference Plombon2011; Kenny, Reference Kenny2018), Ronald Inglehart and co-authors discussed a change in value preference in relation to economic prosperity and environmental protection (Inglehart, Reference Inglehart1977; Reference Inglehart1990; Inglehart and Abramson, Reference Inglehart and Abramson1999). Inglehart recognised that value orientations towards post-materialist preferences were generally formed before adulthood and ‘remained relatively fixed thereafter’ (Kenny, Reference Kenny2018: 107; see also Inglehart and Welzel, Reference Inglehart and Welzel2005). Nevertheless, Inglehart also noted that in the presence of extreme socio-economic conditions, such as economic recessions, orientations could meet fluctuations towards ‘a renewed prioritization’ of materialist values (Kenny, Reference Kenny2018: 107, referring to Inglehart, Reference Inglehart1983).

Although distinct strands of literature recognise a relationship between economic prosperity and environmental protection, there appears to be a little understanding on how situations of economic contraction and austerity such as those triggered by the 2008 global crises could impact public opinion and, specifically, citizens’ attitudes towards environmental protection. Several studies identify ‘pro-environmental attitude’ as the genuine concern that citizens have for existing environmental problems or deteriorating national environmental quality (see, e.g. Dunlap and Scarce, Reference Dunlap and Scarce1991; Kemmelmeier et al., Reference Kemmelmeier, Krol and Kim2002; Franzen and Vogl, Reference Franzen and Vogl2013; Gifford and Nilsson, Reference Gifford and Nilsson2014). Buttel and Flinn (Reference Buttel and Flinn1976) distinguished between two types of environmental attitude, namely the awareness of existing environmental problems and the public support for governmental efforts to control environmental problems through environmental protection measures. Furthermore, Prati et al. (Reference Prati, Albanesi and Pietrantoni2017) refer to ‘pro-environmental behaviour’ defining it as individuals’ awareness and willingness to take responsibility to act towards environmental protection. In this article, we understand ‘pro-environmental attitude’ in a broad sense that includes citizens’ environmental concern and willingness to take action towards environmental protection, as well as citizens’ support towards governmental environmental policy and legislative efforts.

Our understanding of citizens’ ‘pro-environmental attitude’ appears to be particularly important if we consider the role played by public opinion in reaching specific policy outputs. Despite the fact that public opinion does not set the policy agenda (Kingdon, Reference Kingdon2003), policies will reflect public opinion’s views (Dahl, Reference Dahl1971). Citizens are thus not only able to lead policy change in a specific direction (Hakhverdian, Reference Hakhverdian2012), but in some cases they will also provide a measure of policy performance (Wlezien, Reference Wlezien1995). In a systematic analysis linking policy outcomes with public preferences, Franklin and Wlezien (Reference Franklin and Wlezien1997) showed a positive public response to specific policy outputs, in this case the European unification. Using the volume of directives adopted by the EC/EU, Toshkov (Reference Toshkov2011) has further shown that ‘a one-year lag to the movements of public opinion and the accumulated effect of public opinion contributes as much as 20 percent of the variation in policy output’ (Toshkov Reference Toshkov2011: 186). Moreover, a recent study carried out by Anderson et al. (Reference Anderson, Tobias and Hugh2017) on European public opinion and environmental policies covering the period between 1974 and 2015 found that ‘shifts in public opinion in the direction of pro-environmentalism significantly and substantively increase[d] the adoption of renewable energy policies in Europe’ (Anderson et al., Reference Anderson, Tobias and Hugh2017: 8).

Considering the role played by public opinion attitudes and perceptions in European policy-making, in this article we hypothesise that economic well-being and trust in political institutions have an impact on the environmental attitudes of European citizens. Unlike previous studies, our analysis is carried out considering the importance attributed to the environmental issue at both the country and the individual levels. This distinction is important as in times of crises it is expected that citizens will be more concerned about socio-economic aspects than environmental ones. Furthermore, citizens would less likely make personal efforts to protect the environment and would see environmental protection more as a national than a personal problem (Franzen and Vogl, Reference Franzen and Vogl2013).

Our focus is on the period in which the global crises significantly impacted the EU member states. In doing so, we aim to understand whether the global financial/economic crises have produced a shift away from pro-environmental preferences in European citizens. The data used to analyse the environmental attitude of Europeans at individual and country level are taken from 16 Eurobarometer surveysFootnote 3 which cover the period between 2002 and 2017. Considering the availability of data, we use the Eurobarmeters and the questions contained in these surveys as proxies to measure citizens’ environmental concern and willingness to take environmental action as well as their support towards environmental policy and legislative efforts by governments. Using a hierarchical view of information and adopting a multi-variate analysis, we analyse our pooled data distinguishing the ‘green’ countries (i.e. Sweden, Austria, Denmark, Finland, and Germany) and the ‘PIIGS’ countries (i.e. Portugal, Ireland, Italy, Greece, and Spain) from the rest of EU countries under examination.Footnote 4

The article is structured as follows: in the first section, we review existing research on public opinion’s pro-environmental attitudes in wealthy countries and derive our hypotheses on the economic well-being of citizens and their trust in political institutions. In the second section, we provide details on the research design and the methodology used in the empirical part of this study. The third section focusses on the Eurobaromenter surveys, to which we apply a multi-level logistic regression model and analyse the data in a longitudinal approach. Furthermore, we discuss the main findings of the regression model, which show that despite the global crises, between 2008 and 2017 the EU citizens’ pro-environmental attitudes have not substantially changed. Finally, we draw some conclusions.

A review of the determinants of citizens’ pro-environmental attitudes in wealthy countries

For four decades, public opinion polls have reflected citizens’ preferences towards environmental protection (Van Liere and Dunlap, Reference Van Liere and Dunlap1980; Dunlap and Mertig, Reference Dunlap and Mertig2014). The inclusion of environmental protection as a societal issue mirrored an increased public concern towards the existing quality of the environment that began in the United States in the 1960s, with publications foreseeing environmental degradation (e.g. Carson, Reference Carson1962) and followed by the establishment of nature conservation organizations and citizens’ mobilizations (e.g. the Earth Day of 1970). Since then, the relationship between citizens’ concern over the quality and the current state of the environment and increased pro-environmental attitudes have been observed in less-developed and poor countries (Dunlap, Reference Dunlap1994; Inglehart, Reference Inglehart1995), but some studies have shown inconsistencies in this link (see, e.g. Brechin and Kempton, Reference Brechin and Kempton1994; Dunlap and York, Reference Dunlap and York2008).

For industrialised and wealthy countries, a growing body of scholarly works linked pro-environmental attitudes to citizens’ quality of life and life satisfaction (Watts and Wandesforde‐Smith, Reference Watts and Wandesforde‐Smith1980; Dunlap and Scarce, Reference Dunlap and Scarce1991; Welsh, Reference Welsh1993). Ronald Inglehart explained growing public concern over environmental issues by theorising a shift from materialist to post-materialist values (Davis and Davenport, Reference Davis and Davenport1999; Gelissen, Reference Gelissen2007; Dunlap and York, Reference Dunlap and York2008). Since the late 1970s, he studied value shifts from materialism to post-materialism in wealthy nations, observing that value preference correlated with respondents’ needs and societal goals (Inglehart, Reference Inglehart1977; Reference Inglehart1990). The materialist values referred to ‘the economic aspects of people’s life’, while the post-materialist ones corresponded to ‘higher-order values based on abstract principles of humanitarianism, civil liberties, democratic participation and enhanced quality of life’ (Kemmelmeier et al., Reference Kemmelmeier, Krol and Kim2002: 259) and included also a preference for environmental protection (Aoyagi-Usui et al., Reference Aoyagi-Usui, Vinken and Kuribayashi2003; Gelissen, Reference Gelissen2007). In 1995, Inglehart specifically addressed the issue of public support for environmental protection and pointed out that in wealthy nations, environmental attitudes were conditioned by post-materialist values (Inglehart, Reference Inglehart1995). However, the results of several studies examining this link have not always been consistent with Inglehart’s hypothesis (Stern et al., Reference Stern, Dietz, Abel, Guagnano and Kalof1999; Kemmelmeier et al., Reference Kemmelmeier, Krol and Kim2002; Dunlap and York, Reference Dunlap and York2008).

Nevertheless, Inglehart’s theory on post-materialism has provided, in the words of Dunlap and York, ‘important insights into basic social change over the past several decades’ (Dunlap and York, Reference Dunlap and York2008: 532). Furthermore, if we focus on Inglehart’s assumptions that environmental protection is a ‘higher-order quality of life value’, which is generally addressed with economic prosperity and when civil liberties and democratic participation are assured, it is possible to identify two factors – economic well-being and trust in political institutions – which we hypothesise to be important determinants of the attitudes and preferences of European citizens’ in this period of global crises.

Economic well-being

A positive relationship between economy and the environment has been recognised since the 1940s. Maslow’s hierarchy of needs (1943) suggested a direct link between the wealth of a nation and pro-environmental attitudes (Maslow, Reference Maslow1943). A similar argument was made by Inglehart who built his theory of post-materialism and preference towards environmental issues in wealthy nations (Inglehart, Reference Inglehart1995; Reference Inglehart1997). This relationship was further supported by public opinion studies focussing on preferences at societies’ level (Brechin, Reference Brechin1999; Kemmelmeier et al., Reference Kemmelmeier, Krol and Kim2002; Franzen, Reference Franzen2003; Givens and Jorgenson, Reference Givens and Jorgenson2011) and at the respondents’ individual level (Torras and Boyce, Reference Torras and Boyce1998; Ferrer-i-Carbonell and Gowdy, Reference Ferrer-i-Carbonell and Gowdy2005; Silva et al., Reference Silva, de Keulenaer and Johnstone2012; Laureti, Reference Laureti2014).

The correlation between economic prosperity and citizens’ pro-environmental attitudes was also recognised by studies focussing on the citizens’ willingness to make financial sacrifices for environmental protection. In this case, researchers found that citizens supported environmental issues only after reaching a certain level of economic prosperity (Arrow et al., Reference Arrow, Bolin, Costanza, Dasgupta, Folke and Holling1995; Beckerman, Reference Beckerman1992; Fiorino, Reference Fiorino2011; Plombon, Reference Plombon2011; Franzen and Vogl, Reference Franzen and Vogl2013). Moreover, studies found that citizens of wealthy societies were more often willing to pay environmental taxes according to their level of personal wealth (Calvert, Reference Calvert1979; Rasinski, Reference Rasinski1989; Durr, Reference Durr1993; Inglehart, Reference Inglehart1995; Elliott et al., Reference Elliott, Seldon and Regens1997; Knight and Messer, Reference Knight and Messer2012). Considering the link between economic well-being and pro-environmental attitudes, we can thus hypothesise that:

Hypothesis 1: Economic well-being favours citizens’ pro-environmental attitude.

Trust in political institutions

Citizens’ preference towards environmental protection relates to a support for political action. Studies show that citizens concern with the quality of the environment often leads to governmental action towards the adoption of environmental measures (Buttel and Flinn, Reference Buttel and Flinn1976; Dunlap and Scarce, Reference Dunlap and Scarce1991) by placing demands on governments to invest in environmental pollution control and nature conservation measures (Perrings and Ansuategi, Reference Perrings and Ansuategi2000; Dinda, Reference Dinda2004; Dasgupta et al., Reference Dasgupta, Hamilton, Pandey and Wheeler2006; Fiorino, Reference Fiorino2011). However, studies addressing post-materialist value shifts reveal a negative relationship between trust and post-materialist values (Van Deth and Scarbrough, Reference Van Deth and Scarbrough1995; Memoli, Reference Memoli2011; Cheung Reference Cheung2013). Furthermore, research showed that a lack of trust persisted in most industrial democracies where post-materialistic values still played an important role (Norris, Reference Norris1999; Dalton, Reference Dalton2004; Armingeon and Guthmann, Reference Armingeon and Guthmann2014).

However, trust in the decision-making process, in the institutions and their representatives, continues to be a desirable asset for societies, as well as for political systems. As we know, a sufficient level of trust is crucial for the stability and maintenance of political systems and democracy (Listhaug and Ringdal, Reference Listhaug and Ringdal2008). Hence, where citizens’ preference and policy outcomes are well connected and citizens perceive that a government is producing outcomes and implementing policies consistent with their expectations (Hetherington, Reference Hetherington2005), citizens appear satisfied with their political institutions (Memoli, Reference Memoli2013). Conversely, when trust begins to decline, the democratic legitimacy of the political system is endangered (Severs and Mattelaer, Reference Severs and Mattelaer2014).

The studies that connect trust and environmental behaviour have shown mixed results. Franzen and Vogl (Reference Franzen and Vogl2013), using 2010 International Social Survey Programme (ISSP)Footnote 5 dataset and analysing 31 countries, demonstrated that trust in government is positively associated with environmental concern, while Taniguchi and Marshall (Reference Taniguchi and Marshall2018), using the same dataset and focalising on 30 countries, found that it was connected to more willingness to make economic sacrifices for the environment. Harring (Reference Harring2013) using 2000 ISSP data on 25 countries determined that the willingness to make economic sacrifices for environmental protection was affected by political trust. Fairbrother (Reference Fairbrother2016) using different data sources (ISSP and Pew Research Center data) pointed out that the effect of political trust on environmental concern was negative or highly inconsistent, and in some cases the relationship was negative.

Scholars also noticed that trust in governments not only facilitated a collective action towards an environmental improvement but could also provide legitimacy to public institutions (Tsang et al., Reference Tsang, Burnett, Hills and Welford2009). However, when political institutional performance on environmental protection policies declined, citizens lost trust in their institutions and became dissatisfied. This scenario has been well defined by Delmas and Young (Reference Delmas and Young2009) who found a lack of trust when governments did not satisfactorily address the issue of sustainable development, as well as by Gow and Leahy (Reference Gow and Leahy2005) who focussed their study on the relationship between environmental risks and the lack of trust in governments. Hetherington and Husser (Reference Hetherington and Husser2012) suggested that citizens’ trust in political institutions may shape their environmental attitude, but they did not confirm this with empirical evidence. Here we aim to address this evidence gap by testing the following hypothesis:

Hypothesis 2: Trust in the political institutions favours citizens’ pro-environmental attitude.

Research design and methodology

It is well understood that wealthy and industrialized countries with high post-materialist values exhibit pro-environmental attitudes, resulting in the adoption of environmental protection measures (Dunlap and York, Reference Dunlap and York2008). However, what would happen to citizens’ environmental perceptions under economic recession and with the adoption of austerity measures? Would we witness a reduction in citizens’ pro-environmental attitudes? The study of the recent global crises offers the opportunity to address these questions. During the second half of the last decade, the EU was hit by financial and economic crises, as well as by institutional and demographic ones (Hansen and Gordon, Reference Hansen and Gordon2014). The European heads of state and government have agreed on a rescue plan for the European banks and a European recovery plan with the aim of injecting a budgetary stimulus to the EU member states’ economies. Additionally, the European Central Bank has injected liquidity into the European monetary markets and adopted a series of interest-rate cuts (Hodson, Reference Hodson2010). Nevertheless, post-crises recoveries have been weaker than expected in many European countries, with slow GDP growth and persistent high unemployment rates (Antoshin et al., Reference Antoshin, Arena, Gueorguiev, Lybek, Ralyea and Yehoue2017).

In response, civic protests have spread across the EU, where governments have been seen as responsible for the financial and economic situation by citizens (Anduiza et al., Reference Anduiza, Christanco and Sabucedo2013; Hooghe, Reference Hooghe2012). The adoption of counter-cyclical policies has increased the fiscal deficit, aggravated by the banking systems’ rescue, and the consequential private debt has become a public debt. In some Eurozone countries this scenario has created serious doubts on the future of the single currency and the EU itself, producing imbalances, problems, and tensions within the European monetary union (Volz, Reference Volz2013). As a consequence, the relationship between citizens and their own national and European institutions has weakened, especially where public debt has increased and austerity measures have been more stringent (Roth et al., Reference Roth, Nowak-Lehmann and Otter2011). The crises have simultaneously affected the labour market and civil society, eroding the economic stability of families, affecting the future of young people and deepening gender differences in terms of employment, wages, and poverty (Dietrich, Reference Dietrich2012; Rocha, Reference Rocha2012; Bettio et al., Reference Bettio, Corsi, D’Ippoliti, Lyberaki, Lodovici and Verashchagina2012).

In reaction to the global crises, economic prosperity and political trust have declined in the EU countries. It is therefore reasonable to assume that a ‘retrenchment’ in public opinion’s pro-environmental attitude has also taken place in the EU. In order to investigate this assumption, we test the effects of economic well-beingFootnote 6 and trust in political institutions,Footnote 7 our independent variables, on citizens’ environmental attitude, our dependent variable. We use information gathered by 16 Eurobarometers covering the years between 2002 and 2017 and measure citizens’ environmental preference at both individual and country levels to examine possible differences between these two levels.Footnote 8 The information related to the relevance of the environment issue at country levelFootnote 9 is available from Eurobarometer surveys for the years 2002–17, whereas the data for its relevance at individualFootnote 10 level are available for the years 2008–17. Therefore, to account for both levels, we focus on the period between 2008 and 2017.

Although the theme of the environment is not comparable to those related to the economy and inflation/price increase in terms of importance, in the last decade something has changed in the European public opinion. The Eurobarometer surveys reveal that citizens’ attitudes towards environmental issues reflected the political and economic events that influenced the European continent in times of crisis. The data show that between 2008 and 2017 the percentage share of those who believe that the theme of the environment is (perceived as) ‘more important’ has more than doubled, going from just over 4%, in 2008, to almost 9% in 2017. Even when the economic crisis and the migratory one were highly relevant issues for the European public opinion, the environment has never been left aside. In fact, if in 2008 the theme of the environment was considered more important than other issues such as immigration, foreigners, and terrorism, in 2017 it outclassed issues such as crime and the housing problem in addition to the above-mentioned ones. This tendency is found both when the issue is considered among the most important at the country level and when it is evaluated on an individual level.

Deepening the analysis of the trends described above, Figure 1 shows that environmental issues have stimulated public opinion in the period between 2002 and 2017. Between 2002 and 2004 the environment was not a major public concern. Citizens’ sensitivity to environmental issues increased following the definition of EU guidelines on air emissions in 2005 (the Thematic Strategy on air protectionFootnote 11). As a result, the support for environmental protection at country level increased by almost 10% in 2006 compared to 2005, although this was a short-term effect. Between 2008 and 2011, citizens’ positive attitudes towards environmental issues decreased, with differences between individual and country levels. One explanatory factor could be linked to public concern about the economic crises and the prospect of cuts in governmental expenditures (Van der Heijden, Reference Van der Heijden2010; Franzen and Vogl, Reference Franzen and Vogl2013). Nevertheless, from 2011, concern for the environment increased, particularly at an individual level, until 2015 where it began to decline. Conversely, from 2016 onwards pro-environmental attitudes increased at the country level.

Figure 1 The salience of the environmental issue over time Source: Eurobarometer (88.3/2017; 86.2/2016; 84.3/2015; 82.3/2014; 80.1/2013; 78.1/2012; 76.3/2011; 73.4/2010; 71.3/2009; 70.1/2008; 68.1/2007; 66.3/2006; 64.2/2005; 62/2004; 60.1/2003; 57.2/2002).

Table 1 displays the percentage of variation in environmental attitudes among EU countries between 2008 and 2017. It can be observed that environmental issues are found to be more important at both individual and country levels in 13 EU countries under consideration. Among these countries, Germany and the Netherlands are the countries where pro-environmental attitudes have grown by at least 5.0 percentage points during the period considered. In contrast, in Greece and Slovenia the public attributed less importance to the environment. This is particularly pronounced in Greece where the decrease is >3.9%. Nevertheless, in half of the EU countries there is a clear contradiction: pro-environmental attitude grows at country level while it decreases at individual level and vice versa.

Table 1 Percentage variation in the salience of the environment issue (2008–17)

Source: Eurobarometer (88.3/2017; 86.2/2016; 84.3/2015; 82.3/2014; 80.1/2013; 78.1/2012; 78.1/ 2011; 76.3/2010; 71.3/2009; 70.1/2008; 68.1/2007; 66.3/2006; 64.2/2005; 62/2004; 60.1/2003; 52.2/2002).

As shown in Table 2 covering the period 2008–17, the environmental preferences of Europeans appear complex. In our analysis we consider several socio-demographic characteristics (gender, age, occupation, and type of community), and we also consider the ‘green countries’. The longitudinal analysis of data at country and individual levels reveals a central core of environmental supporters among the EU countries. Moreover, comparing the information for the year 2008 with that of 2017, it emerges that women more than men are pro-environment at a country level. This trend includes those who are employed, who live in large towns as well as in the green countries. Among the green countries, pro-environmental attitudes have increased by more than 10% in 9 years. However, the national scenario differs from the individual level where the environment is more important for men, the self-employed and employed, those who live in small/middle towns, and in green countries.

Table 2 Environment issue and socio-demographic indicators (% values)

Source: Eurobarometer (70.1/2008; 71.3/2009; 88.3/2017).

The findings highlighted by our data appear to underline how among citizens there is not always a homogeneous view of the environmental issue. Despite these differences indicated by the socio-demographic factors, over time a central core of environmental supporters has materialized among the EU countries.

Data analysis

Our dataset (panel data) is hierarchically organised with one level (respondents) embedded in the other (country), and we thus apply a random logistic regression multilevel model that allows for each observation to be correlated within countries (see Steenbergen and Jones, Reference Steenbergen and Jones2002). This choice is mainly dictated by two aspects: First of all, because the number of countries analysed (N=28) is larger than the number of years considered (T=10); and second, because some important explanatory variables from the analysis, namely unemployment or GDP growth, are time-invariant and constant within countries. In other words, a fixed-effect model would be inappropriate.

We present our environmental model in Table 3, which covers the period 2008–17. To explain citizens’ environmental attitudes at individual and country levels, we look at three variables: national economy perception, financial situation, and trust in political institutions. Since it is possible that levels of political trust can be affected by existing negative economic trends and there may be a lag time between economic events and changes in respondents’ environmental attitudes, at country level we consider the average GDP growth as well as unemployment levels for the 3 years preceding each survey.Footnote 12 Furthermore, we control the effect of the two independent variables on the dependent variable by considering several socio-demographic characteristics (gender,Footnote 13 age,Footnote 14 occupation,Footnote 15 type of communityFootnote 16), and citizens’ perception of life satisfactionFootnote 17 for the year preceding each survey. We also add two dummy variables to differentiate environmental attitudes of ‘green’ and ‘PIIGS’ countries from the others.Footnote 18

Table 3 Correlates of environmental attitudes (2008–17)

Note: Reference category: national economy: bad; financial situation: bad; confidence in political institutions: no one; gender: man; occupation: self-employed; type of community: rural area or village; green country: no; PIIGS countries: no. *P<0.05; **P<0.01.

Source: Eurobarometer (88.3/2017; 86.2/2016; 84.3/2015; 82.3/2014; 80.1/2013; 78.1/2012; 76.3/2011; 73.4/2010; 71.3/2009; 70.1/2008).

Our findings support our two hypotheses on economic well-being and trust in political institutions. At country level, we observe a correlation between citizens positively evaluating the economy and their attribution of importance to the environment. The positive perception of the national economy as well as the financial situation makes citizens at least 1.088 times more likely to place importance on environmental issues compared to citizens with a negative perception of their national economy and financial situation. In other words, a perceived economic well-being positively correlates with a higher environmental attitude.

Although national economy and financial situation perception appear to correlate with higher public environmentalism, trust in political institutions is also important. This is particularly evident when trust is placed on the two main political institutions, namely in the parliament and the government of a country. Our data show that the odds of a higher environmental attitude in respondents with trust in these two political institutions are 48.3% more likely to have a pro-environmental attitude in comparison to respondents without trust in political institutions in general. However, this probability is slightly lower when public trust is placed only in the parliament or in the government.

We find similar trends when we consider the relevance of environmental issues at the individual level. In addition, in this case, the environmental attitudes appear to be strongly influenced by the respondents’ perception of the national economy. In fact, a one-unit change in the national economy (from bad to good) increases the odds of environmental sensitivity by a factor of 1.518. Moreover, the perception of the financial situation positively impacts on the dependent variable, but with a much lower probability (1.097) than the perception of the national economy. The institutional trust affects the dependent variable, with a slightly lower probability than that found at the country level.

Our findings support our hypotheses also when controlling for economic and socio-demographic factors. At country level, with sustained economic growth, citizens’ attitudes towards the environment are more positive. This result is true among women and those who in the preceding year survey expressed life satisfaction. Furthermore, inhabitants of large towns place more importance on environmental issues. Young people more than adults are more inclined to place importance on the environment, whereas individual employment status does not reveal specific differences in terms of environmental attitudes: both employed and unemployed negatively affect environmental sensitivity. Moreover, in green countries there is a greater likelihood to observe a more positive environmental attitude at country level. On the contrary, among the PIIGS countries environmental sensitivity is probably given to more micro and macro-economic issues and the pro-environmental attitude is lower at a country level. At individual level, women appear to be more sensitive than men to environment (1.047), but only those respondents who live in large towns place greater importance on environmental issues. Similar to the results for the country level, employment status produces a negative effect on the sensitivity to environment, particularly for those who are not working. Citizens of green countries and with higher quality of life appear more inclined towards environmental issues. However, among PIIGS countries or in countries with high unemployment, most citizens do not consider the environment particularly important.

Conclusions

Many public opinion studies have investigated the motivations for environmental preferences in wealthy nations, pointing to determinants such as a genuine concern for environmental quality, respondents’ socio-demographic features, and economic well-being. Several studies explained the increased environmentalism of industrialised nations with a shift from materialist to post-materialist values. Considering these explanations for citizens’ environmental attitudes and their relationship to economic prosperity, with this article we have shifted the focus to investigate the environmental preferences in times of economic recession and austerity, a topic that still appears underexplored in the literature.Footnote 19 Recent research has addressed the impact of the crises on EU policy-making by providing a ‘toolkit’ to measure environmental change as a result of exogenous shocks, namely the global economic and financial crises (Burns and Tobin, Reference Burns and Tobin2016). Moreover, Falkner (Reference Falkner2016b) stressed how the crises have not substantially changed the broad objectives of the European climate and energy policies but changed the ‘hierarchy of priorities with now much stronger leaning towards economic concerns and – often – fiscal containment’ (Falkner Reference Falkner2016a: 228; but on this point see also Slominski, Reference Slominski2016) with the result of shifting the attention away from environmental protection (Slominski, Reference Slominski2016).

Regarding changes in public attitudes following the 2008 global crises, and referring to Inglehart’s theorising on post-materialism, we would have expected a shift to less pro-environmental attitudes and a preference shift towards materialistic values, as suggested also by recent studies (e.g. Conroy and Emerson, Reference Conroy and Emerson2014). However, despite the fact that the global crises affected European governments and citizens’ collective economic well-being and political trust, environmental attitudes do not seem to have substantially changed in the EU countries we studied. On the contrary, echoing findings from other studies, we found that between 2008 and 2017 environmental protection remained a priority. Examples of such prioritisation can be found in the lengthy discussions among EU member states on climate change (Chaisty and Whitefield, Reference Chaisty and Whitefield2015; Marcinkiewicz and Tosun, Reference Marcinkiewicz and Tosun2015), the EU institutions’ agenda (Čavoški, Reference Čavoški2015), as well as at national level with the issue of compliance with European environmental legislation (Lekakis and Kousis, Reference Lekakis and Kousis2013).

From a longitudinal perspective, the environmental issue is increasingly considered an important issue among European citizens, also when compared with other social, political, and economic issues. In this view, pro-environmental attitudes were supported when environmental issues were considered important at both country and individual levels. Since 2011, motivation at both levels made European citizens increasingly sensitive to the theme of environmental protection. Furthermore, our findings show that environmental attitudes at both individual and country levels have been unevenly distributed between EU countries, as summarised in Tables 1 and 2. Thus, when citizens’ attitudes towards environmental issues are more positive at an individual level, they are less positive at a country level, and vice versa. Additionally, the percentage of European citizens considering the environment a highly important issue has increased, particularly when it is evaluated at a country level. Between 2008 and 2017, the environment was regarded as an important issue in almost half of the countries at both the individual and country levels, while in 14 EU countries there was a clear contradiction: positive attitudes towards environmental protection increased at country level while simultaneously decreasing at individual level and vice versa.

Our multi-level logistic regression models (Table 3) on the Eurobarometer data pool (2008–17) identify correlations between economic well-being and environmental attitudes as well as between political institutions and environmental attitudes. Both aspects of economic well-being and trust in political institutions appear to positively correlate with a higher environmental attitude. Hence, when the economy is strong, citizens are more inclined to attribute importance to environmental issues, even in presence of low trust in the political institutions. On the contrary, when economic performance is poor, citizens tend to prioritise other issues and to view environmental issues as of governmental concern. Furthermore, unlike trust in political institutions, the positive correlation between strong economic performance and environmental attitudes persists at both country and individual levels. We recognise that these findings cannot be generalised to all European citizens and countries under examination. Moreover, in countries with economic prosperity and a greater adoption of environmental protection measures, namely the green countries, citizens’ pro-environmental attitude is greater.

Despite these possible limitations, this work offers a first analysis of the relationship between economy and the environment in recent years, primarily revealing how the pro-environmental attitudes of European citizens have persisted even in presence of exogenous shocks. Future directions of study may lead to consider the multi-dimensional nature of environmental problems and the different environmental resources. Furthermore, it could aim to better disentangle the contradictions between the importance of environment at individual and country levels, shedding light on the interdependencies and interactions between different environmental aspects (e.g. water, air, and soil). Moreover, it could expand the spatial dimension of analysis and consider also the local, regional, and international contexts.

Acknowledgements

A previous version of this article was presented at the ECPR General Conference 2015 in the panel on ‘Green Parties and Partisan Politics’. We thank the panel participants and chairs for the stimulating discussions. We are also grateful to Maurizio Cotta, Jens Newig, and Maria Ravlik for reading and providing valuable comments on earlier drafts, to Emmeline Topp for her edits as well as to two anonymous reviewers for their insightful and helpful suggestions.

Financial support

The research received no grants from public, commercial, or non-profit funding agency.

Data

The replication dataset is available at http://thedata.harvard.edu/dvn/dv/ipsr-risp.

Footnotes

1 Following Falkner (Reference Falkner2016a), in this article we use the terms ‘global crises’, ‘economic and financial crises’, or simply ‘crises’ to indicate the ‘conglomerate of specific but interconnected crises’ (Falkner, Reference Falkner2016a: 220), namely a banking crisis and a sovereign debt crisis, that hit the EU member states following the collapse of the Lehman Brothers’ investment bank in 2008. These crises had repercussions on EU’s and member states’ economic developments, causing also a general feeling of distrust towards banks (Falkner, Reference Falkner2016a), as well as between EU countries (Cotta, Reference Cotta2017).

2 In our analysis, we assume that the EU member states are ‘wealthy’ countries. Our assumption is justified by the fact that the EU member states score at the top in several well-known statistical indexes, which rank countries worldwide in terms of economy and human development, that is, the World Bank’s Country Income Groups, the International Monetary Fund’s World Economic Outlook, and the Human Development Index of the United Nations Development Programme. For more details, see: https://datahelpdesk.worldbank.org/knowledgebase/articles/906519-world-bank-country-and-lending-groups; https://www.imf.org/external/datamapper/PPPPC@WEO/OEMDC/ADVEC/WEOWORLD/EU; http://hdr.undp.org/en/composite/trends.

3 The Eurobarometer datasets considered in this article are the following: n. 88.3 (2017); n. 86.2 (2016); n. 84.3 (2015); n. 82.3 (/2014); n. 80.1 (2013); n. 78.1 (2012); n. 78.1 (2011); n. 76.3 (2010); n. 71.3 (2009); n. 70.1 (2008); n.68.1 (2007); n. 66.3 (2006); n. 64.2 (2005); n. 62.0 (2004); n. 60.1 (2003); n. 57.2 (2002). The data are available at the following link: http://zacat.gesis.org/webview/index.jsp.

4 Several studies have classified Sweden, Austria, Denmark, Finland, and Germany as pioneers in adopting environmental protection measures at national level as well as leaders in uploading them at EU level (Wurzel, Reference Wurzel2002; Börzel, Reference Börzel2003; Jänicke, Reference Jänicke2005; Liefferink et al., Reference Liefferink, Arts, Kamstra and Ooijevaar2009). Therefore, we label these EU member states as ‘green’ countries because of their higher preference towards environmental protection. Moreover, researchers classified Portugal, Ireland, Italy, Greece, and Spain as environmental laggards because they generally resisted or delayed the national implementation of European environmental legislation (Delreux and Happaerts, Reference Delreux and Happaerts2016). We label these EU member states characterised by low levels of preference towards environmental protection with the acronym ‘PIIGS’.

5 The International Social Survey Programme (ISSP) is an international cross-country collaboration programme which conducts annual surveys on different topics relevant for the social sciences. For more information, see http://www.issp.org/menu-top/home/.

6 As our database is composed of several Eurobarometer surveys for the years 2002–17, we operationalize the ‘economic well-being’ hypothesis at country and individual levels by looking at ‘national economy perception’ and ‘financial situation’. For the former, the question formulated in the Eurobarometer surveys is the following: ‘How would you judge the current situation in each of the following: The situation of the (NATIONALITY) economy’. The variable was recoded in the following way: 1, who answers ‘very good+rather good’ and 0, who indicates ‘very bad+rather bad’. For the latter, the question formulated is the following: ‘How would you judge the current situation in each of the following: The financial situation of your household. The variable was recoded in the following way: 1, who answers ‘very good+rather good’ and 0, who indicates ‘very bad+rather bad’.

7 In our analysis, we measure ‘trust in political institutions’ by adding an additive index that aggregates who has trust in the government and in the parliament among the respondents of the Eurobarometers under examination.

8 As pointed out by Bevan et al. (Reference Bevan, Jennings and Wlezien2015), an issue that is important for the country (socio-tropic view) may not be seen as important at an individual level (egocentric view), and vice versa.

9 The question formulated at country level is the following: What do you think are the two most important issues facing (OUR COUNTRY) at the moment? The variable was coded in the following way: 1, who answers ‘The environment, climate and energy issues’ and 0, who indicates a different issue.

10 The question formulated at individual level is the following: And personally, what are the two most important issues you are facing at the moment? The variable was coded in the following way: 1, who answers ‘The environment, climate and energy issues’ and 0, who indicates a different issue.

11 For detailed information on this strategy, see http://ec.europa.eu/environment/archives/cafe/pdf/strat_com_en.pdf.

12 The source of data is World Bank.

13 It is represented by a dummy variable coded in the following way: 0=male; 1=female.

14 It is represented by a cardinal variable that goes from 18 to 98 years and older.

15 It is represented by an ordinal variable coded in the following way: 0=self-employed; 1=employed; 2=not working.

16 It is represented by an ordinal variable coded in the following way: 0=rural area or village; 1=small/middle town; 2=large town.

17 The question is ‘On the whole, are you very satisfied, fairly satisfied, not very satisfied or not at all satisfied with the life you lead?’ The percentage values expressed by the variable represent the level of life satisfaction in the country (very satisfied + fairly satisfied) in the year preceding each survey.

18 The ‘green countries’ variable has a value of 1 for Austria, Denmark, Finland, Germany, and Sweden, 0 for the others. The ‘PIIGS countries’ variable has a value of 1 for Greece, Ireland, Italy, Portugal, and Spain, 0 for the others.

19 One exception is the recent study carried out by Kenny (Reference Kenny2018). Although not focussing on the EU, he analysed public opinion’s environmental preferences during the 2008 global economic and financial crises and found a lack of correlation between the 2008 crises and a decline in public opinion’s environmental preference.

References

Anderson, B, Tobias, BHugh, W (2017) Public opinion and environmental policy output: a cross-national analysis of energy policies in Europe. Environmental Research Letters 12(11): 110.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Anduiza, E, Christanco, CSabucedo, JM. (2013) Mobilization through online social networks: the political protest of the indignados in Spain. Information, Communication, and Society 17(6): 750764.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Antoshin, S, Arena, M, Gueorguiev, N, Lybek, T, Ralyea, JYehoue, EB (2017) Credit growth and economic recovery in Europe after the global financial crisis. IMF Working Papers 17/253, 154.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Aoyagi-Usui, M, Vinken, HKuribayashi, A (2003) Pro-environmental attitudes and behaviors: an international comparison. Human Ecology Review 10(1): 2331.Google Scholar
Armingeon, KGuthmann, K (2014) Democracy in crisis? The declining support for national democracy in European countries, 2007–2011. European Journal of Political Research 53(3): 423442.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Arrow, K, Bolin, B, Costanza, R, Dasgupta, P, Folke, CHolling, CS (1995) Economic growth, carrying capacity, and the environment. Science 268(5210): 520521.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Beckerman, W (1992) Economic growth and the environment: Whose growth? Whose environment? World Development 20(4): 481496.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bettio, F, Corsi, M, D’Ippoliti, C, Lyberaki, A, Lodovici, MSVerashchagina, A (2012) The Impact of the Economic Crisis on the Situation of Women and Men and on Gender Equality Policies. European Commission, Luxembourg: European Union.Google Scholar
Bevan, S, Jennings, WWlezien, C (2015) An analysis of the public’s personal, national and EU issue priorities. Journal of European Public Policy 23(6): 871887.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Börzel, TA (2003) Environmental Leaders and Laggards in Europe: Why There Is (Not) a Southern Problem. Aldershot: Ashgate.Google Scholar
Brechin, SR (1999) Objective problems, subjective values, and global environmentalism: Evaluating the postmaterialist argument and challenging a new explanation. Social Science Quarterly 80(4): 793809.Google Scholar
Brechin, SRKempton, W (1994) Global environmentalism: a challenge to the postmaterialism thesis? Social Science Quarterly 75(2): 245269.Google Scholar
Burns, CJTobin, P (2016) The impact of the economic crisis on European Union environmental policy. Journal of Common Market Studies 54(6): 14851494.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Buttel, FHFlinn, WL (1976) Economic growth versus the environment: survey evidence. Social Science Quarterly 57(2): 410420.Google Scholar
Calvert, JW (1979) The social and ideological bases of support for environmental legislation: an examination of public attitudes and legislative action. The Western Political Quarterly 32(3): 327337.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carson, R (1962) Silent Spring. Boston: Houghton Mifflin.Google Scholar
Cato, SM (2011) Environment and Economy. London: Routledge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Čavoški, A (2015) A post-austerity European Commission: no role for environmental policy? Environmental Politics 24(3): 501505.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chaisty, PWhitefield, S (2015) Attitudes towards the environment: are postcommunist societies (still) different? Environmental Politics 24(4): 598616.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cheung, C (2013) Postmaterialist Influences on Welfare Adequacy and Political Trust in Hong Kong. Journal of Comparative Asian Development 12(1): 147179.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Commission of the European Communities (1973) Programme of the environmental action of the European Communities’. Bulletin of the European Communities, Supplement 3/1973.Google Scholar
Conroy, SJEmerson, TLN (2014) A tale of trade-offs: the impact of macro-economic factors on environmental concern. Journal of Environmental Management 145, 8893.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cotta, M (2017) Un’altra Europa è possibile – Che fare per salvarla. Il Mulino.Google Scholar
Dahl, R (1971) Polyarchy: Participation and Opposition. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Dalton, RJ (2004) Democratic Challenges, Democratic Choices: The Erosion in Political Support in Advanced Industrial Societies. Oxford: Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dasgupta, S, Hamilton, K, Pandey, KDWheeler, D (2006) Environment during growth: accounting for governance and vulnerability. World Development 34(9): 15971611.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Davis, DWDavenport, C (1999) Assessing the validity of the postmaterialism index. American Political Science Review 93(3): 649664.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
de Sismondi, JCLS (1847) Political Economy, and The Philosophy of Government; A Series of Essays Selected from the Works of M. De Sismondi, Transl. London: John Chapman.Google Scholar
Delmas, MAYoung, OR (2009) Governance for the Environment: New Perspectives. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Delreux, THappaerts, S (2016) Environmental Policy and Politics in the European Union, Palgrave Macmillan.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dietrich, H (2012) Youth Unemployment in Europe. Theoretical Considerations and Empirical Findings. Berlin: Friedrich Ebert-Stiftung.Google Scholar
Dinda, S (2004) Environmental Kuznets curve hypothesis: a survey. Ecological Economics 49(4): 431455.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dunlap, RE (1994) International attitudes towards environment and development. Green Globe Yearbook of International Co-operation on Environment and Development 1994, 115126.Google Scholar
Dunlap, REScarce, R (1991) Poll trends: environmental problems and protection. The Public Opinion Quarterly 55(4): 651672.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dunlap, REYork, R (2008) The globalization of environmental concern and the limits of the postmaterialist values explanation: evidence from four multinational surveys. The Sociological Quarterly 49(3): 529563.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dunlap, REMertig, AG (2014) Trends in public opinion toward environmental issues: 1965–1990. American Environmentalism 4(3): 209218.Google Scholar
Durr, RH (1993) What moves policy sentiment? American Political Science Review 87(1): 158170.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Elliott, E, Seldon, BJRegens, JL (1997) Political and economic determinants of individuals’ support for environmental spending. Journal of Environmental Management 51(1): 1527.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fairbrother, M (2016) Trust and public support for environmental protection in diverse national contexts. Sociological Science 3, 359382.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Falkner, G (2016a) The EU’s current crisis and its policy effects: research design and comparative findings. Journal of European Integration 38(3): 219235.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Falkner, G (2016b) The EU’s problem-solving capacity and legitimacy in a crisis context: a virtuous or vicious circle? West European Politics 39(5): 953970.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ferrer-i-Carbonell, AGowdy, J (2005) ‘Environmental Awareness and Happiness’. Rensselaer Working Papers in Economics, 0503.Google Scholar
Fiorino, DJ (2011) Explaining national environmental performance: approaches, evidence, and implications. Policy Sciences 44(4): 367389.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Franklin, MNWlezien, C (1997) The responsive public: issue salience, policy change, and preferences for European unification. Journal of Theoretical Politics 9(3): 347363.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Franzen, A (2003) Environmental attitudes in international comparison: an analysis of the ISSP surveys 1993 and 2000. Social Science Quarterly 84(2): 297308.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Franzen, AVogl, D (2013) Two decades of measuring environmental attitudes: a comparative analysis of 33 countries. Global Environmental Change 23(5): 10011008.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gelissen, J (2007) Explaining popular support for environmental protection: a multilevel analysis of 50 nations. Environment and Behavior 39(3): 392415.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gifford, RNilsson, A (2014) Personal and social factors that influence pro‐environmental concern and behaviour: a review. International Journal of Psychology 49(3): 141157.Google ScholarPubMed
Givens, JEJorgenson, AK (2011) The effects of affluence, economic development, and environmental degradation on environmental concern: a multilevel analysis. Organization & Environment 24(1): 7491.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gow, JLeahy, T (2005) Apocalypse probably: agency and environmental risk in the Hunter region. Journal of Sociology 41(2): 117141.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Grossman, GMKrueger, AB (1995) Economic environment and the economic growth. Quarterly Journal of Economics 110(2): 353377.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hakhverdian, A (2012) The causal flow between public opinion and policy: government responsiveness, leadership, or counter movement? West European Politics 35(6): 13861406.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hansen, RGordon, JC (2014) Deficits, democracy, and demographics: Europe’s three crises. West European Politics 37(6): 11991222.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Harring, N (2013) Understanding the effects of corruption and political trust on willingness to make economic sacrifices for environmental protection in a cross‐national perspective. Social Science Quarterly 94(3): 660671.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hetherington, MJ (2005) Why Trust Matters: Declining Political Trust and the Demise of American Liberalism. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Hetherington, MJHusser, JA (2012) How trust matters: the changing political relevance of political trust. American Journal of Political Science 56(2): 312325.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hey, C (2005) EU environmental policies: a short history of the policy strategies. In European Environmental Bureau, In Stefan Scheuer (ed.). EU Environmental Policy Handbook. A Critical Analysis of EU Environmental Legislation. Brussels: European Environmental Bureau, 1730.Google Scholar
Hodson, D (2010) The EU economy: The euro area in 2009. Journal of Common Market Studies 48(1): 225242.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hooghe, M (2012) Taking to the streets. Harvard International Review 34(2): 3438.Google Scholar
Human Development Index of the United Nations Development Programme. Retrieved from http://hdr.undp.org/en/composite/trends.Google Scholar
Inglehart, R (1977) Long term trends in mass support for European unification. Government and Opposition 12(2): 150177.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Inglehart, R (1983) The persistence of materialist and post-materialist value orientations: comments on Van Deth’s analysis. European Journal of Political Research 11(1): 8191.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Inglehart, R (1990) Culture Shift in Advanced Industrial Society. Cambridge, UK: Princeton University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Inglehart, R (1995) Public support for environmental protection: objective problems and subjective values in 43 societies. Political Science & Politics 28(1): 5772.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Inglehart, R (1997) Modernization and Postmodernization. Cultural, Economic, and Political Change in 43 Societies. Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Inglehart, RAbramson, PR (1999) Measuring postmaterialism. American Political Science Review 93(3): 665677.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Inglehart, RWelzel, C (2005) Modernization, Cultural Change, and Democracy: The Human Development Sequence. Princeton, NJ: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
International Monetary Fund’s World Economic Outlook. Retrieved from https://www.imf.org/external/datamapper/PPPPC@WEO/OEMDC/ADVEC/WEOWORLD/EU.Google Scholar
International Social Survey Programme. Retrieved from http://www.issp.org/menu-top/home/.Google Scholar
Jänicke, M (2005) Trend-setters in environmental policy: the character and role of pioneer countries. European Environment 15(2): 129142.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kelemen, DRVogel, D (2010) Trading places: the role of the United States and the European Union in international environmental politics. Comparative Political Studies 43(4): 427456.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kemmelmeier, M, Krol, GKim, YH (2002) Values, economics, and proenvironmental attitudes in 22 societies. Cross-Cultural Research 36(3): 256285.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kenny, J (2018) Environmental protection preferences under strain: an analysis of the impact of changing individual perceptions of economic and financial conditions on environmental public opinion during economic crisis. Journal of Elections, Public Opinion and Parties 28(1): 105124.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kingdon, JW (2003) Agendas, Alternatives, and Public Policies, 2nd edn., New York: Longman.Google Scholar
Knight, KWMesser, BL (2012) Environmental concern in cross‐national perspective: the effects of affluence, environmental degradation, and World Society. Social Science Quarterly 93(2): 521537.Google Scholar
Laureti, T (2014) ‘Life satisfaction and environmental conditions in Italy: a pseudo panel approach’. Collana di E-papers del Dipartimento di Economia e Management – Università di Pisa, Discussion Paper No. 192.Google Scholar
Lekakis, JNKousis, M (2013) Economic crisis, Troika and the environment in Greece”. South European Society and Politics 18(3): 305331.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lenschow, A (2010) ‘Environmental policy: contending dynamics of policy change’., In Helen Wallace, Mark A. Pollack and Alasdair R. Young (eds). Policy-Making in the European Union. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 319343.Google Scholar
Liefferink, DAndersen, MS (1998) Strategies of the green member states in EU environmental policy-making. Journal of European Public Policy 5(2): 250270.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Liefferink, D, Arts, B, Kamstra, JOoijevaar, J (2009) Leaders and laggards in environmental policy: a quantitative analysis of domestic policy outputs. Journal of European Public Policy 16(5): 677700.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Listhaug, ORingdal, K (2008) ‘Trust in political institutions’., In Heikki Heikki, Fridberg Torben, Mikae Hjerm and Kirsten Ringdal (eds). Nordic Social Attitudes in a European Perspective. Northampton Massachusetts: Edward Elgar Publishing.Google Scholar
Malthus., TR (1878) An Essay on the Principle of Population: Or, A View of Its Past and Present Effects on Human Happiness, with an Inquiry into Our Prospects Respecting the Future Removal or Mitigation of the Evils Which it Occasions. London: Reeves and Turner.Google Scholar
Marcinkiewicz, KTosun, J (2015) Contesting climate change: mapping the political debate in Poland. East European Politics 31(2): 187207.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Maslow, AH (1943) A theory of human motivation. Psychological Review 50(4): 370396.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Memoli, V (2011) Sostenere la democrazia. Roma: Aracne.Google Scholar
Memoli, V (2013) ‘Responsiveness’, In Leonardo Morlino, Daniela Piana and Francesco Raniolo (eds). La Qualità della democrazia 1992-2012. Bologna: Il Mulino.Google Scholar
Mill, JS (1848/2004) Principles of Political Economy. Great Minds Series. Amherst, NY: Prometheus Books.Google Scholar
Norris, P ed. (1999) Critical Citizens: Global Support for Democratic Government. Oxford: Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Perrings, CAnsuategi, A (2000) Sustainability, growth and development. Journal of Economic Studies 27(1/2): 1954.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Plombon, E (2011) Factors affecting pro-environmental attitudes. Journal of Undergraduate Research 25, 114.Google Scholar
Prati, G, Albanesi, CPietrantoni, L (2017) The interplay among environmental attitudes, pro-environmental behavior, social identity, and pro-environmental institutional climate. A longitudinal study. Environmental Education Research 23(2): 176191.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rasinski, KA (1989) The effect of question wording on public support for government spending. Public Opinion Quarterly 53(3): 388394.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rocha, SF (2012) ‘El desempleo juvenil en España. Situaciones y recomendaciones políticas’. Informe, 50, Fundación 1° de Mayo.Google Scholar
Roth, F, Nowak-Lehmann, FDOtter, T (2011) ‘Has the financial crisis shattered citizens’ trust in national and European governmental institutions? Evidence from the EU member states, 1999–2010’. CESP (Centre for European Policy Studies), 343, June.Google Scholar
Severs, EMattelaer, A (2014) ‘A crisis of democratic legitimacy? It’s about legitimation, stupid!’. European Policy Bries, n. 21. Brussels: EGMONT.Google Scholar
Silva, J, de Keulenaer, FJohnstone, N (2012) ‘Environmental quality and life satisfaction: evidence based on micro-data’. OECD Environment Working Papers, No. 44. OECD Publishing.Google Scholar
Slominski, P (2016) Energy and climate policy: does the competitiveness narrative prevail in times of crisis? Journal of European Integration 38(3): 343357.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Steenbergen, MRJones, BS (2002) Modeling multilevel data structures. American Journal of Political Science 46(1): 218237.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stern, PC, Dietz, T, Abel, T, Guagnano, GAKalof, L (1999) A value-belief-norm theory of support for social movements: the case of environmentalism. Human Ecology Review 6(2): 8197.Google Scholar
Taniguchi, HMarshall, GA (2018) Trust, political orientation, and environmental behavior. Environmental Politics 27(3): 385410.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Torras, MBoyce, JK (1998) Income, inequality, and pollution: a reassessment of the environmental Kuznets curve. Ecological Economics 25(2): 147160.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Toshkov, D (2011) Public opinion and policy output in the European Union: a lost relationship. European Union Politics 12(2): 169191.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tsang, S, Burnett, M, Hills, PWelford, R (2009) Trust, public participation and environmental governance in Hong Kong. Environmental Policy and Governance 19(2): 99114.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Van der Heijden, H-A (2010) The Dutch 2010 elections and the environment. Environmental Politics 19(6): 10001005.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Van Deth, JWScarbrough, E (1995) The Impact of Values. New York: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Van Liere, KDDunlap, RE (1980) The social bases of environmental concern: A review of hypotheses, explanations and empirical evidence. Public Opinion Quarterly 44(2): 181197.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Volz, U (2013) Lessons of the European crisis for regional monetary and financial integration in East Asia. Asia Europe Journal 11(4): 355376.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Watts, NWandesforde‐Smith, G (1980) Postmaterial values and environmental policy change. Policy Studies Journal 9(3): 346358.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Welsh, D (1993) Domestic politics and ethnic conflict. Survival 35(1): 6380.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wlezien, C (1995) The public as thermostat: dynamics of preferences for spending. American Journal of Political Science 39(4): 9811000.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wurzel, RKW (2002) Environmental Policy-Making in Britain, Germany, and the European Union: The Europeanisation of Air and Water Pollution Control. Manchester: Manchester University Press.Google Scholar
Zito, AR (2005) The European Union as an environmental leader in a global environment. Globalizations 2(3): 363375.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Figure 0

Figure 1 The salience of the environmental issue over time Source: Eurobarometer (88.3/2017; 86.2/2016; 84.3/2015; 82.3/2014; 80.1/2013; 78.1/2012; 76.3/2011; 73.4/2010; 71.3/2009; 70.1/2008; 68.1/2007; 66.3/2006; 64.2/2005; 62/2004; 60.1/2003; 57.2/2002).

Figure 1

Table 1 Percentage variation in the salience of the environment issue (2008–17)

Figure 2

Table 2 Environment issue and socio-demographic indicators (% values)

Figure 3

Table 3 Correlates of environmental attitudes (2008–17)