Publication | Closed Access
Looking for a White Male Effect in Generation Z: Race, Gender, and Political Effects on Environmental Concern and Ambivalence
19
Citations
35
References
2018
Year
EthnicityRacial PrejudiceEnvironmental PsychologyEducationEnvironmental ConcernRacial StudySocial SciencesRaceEnvironmental BehaviorGender StudiesAfrican American StudiesBlack WomenGeneration ZConservative White MaleWhite Male EffectSocial IdentityIntersectionalityEnvironmental JusticeSociologyPolitical AttitudesSocio-environmental ImplicationSocial DiversityWhite MalesPro-environmental BehaviorRace RelationUnique White Male
The “White male effect” has been presented in past literature as a way to explain the tendency for White males to have lower environmental concern and risk perceptions than female and non-White individuals. Recently, research has proposed the “White male effect” may be a “conservative White male effect,” due to findings that political ideology impacts environmental concern. This study used a sample of young college-educated adults from Generation Z to test whether the conservative White male effect is present for environmental concern and ambivalence toward a proenvironmental worldview in this younger generation. Online surveys were distributed to undergraduate students at a large northeastern university in spring of 2016. A total of 1,940 surveys were returned. Results showed a lack of a unique White male, or conservative White male, effect above and beyond differences explained by gender, Whiteness, and political affiliation. The implications of this effect’s absence are discussed.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1