• Why not take a moment to introduce yourself to our members?

clarionreef

Advanced Reefer
Location
San Francisco
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
Survey: Why Pro-Environmental Views Don’t Always Translate Into Votes...[ or sales ]



Tuesday, September 20, 2005



Durham, N.C. -- Eight-in-10 Americans say they support pro-environmental policies, but a new national survey by the Nicholas Institute for Environmental Policy Solutions at Duke University finds their support often stops short of the ballot box. The survey suggests opportunities for how to address this disconnect.


Environment and Earth Sciences
Public Policy
“These results are a wake-up call, but they also represent an important opportunity,” said Tim Profeta, director of the Nicholas Institute. “They help us understand what we need to do to build public consensus and break down barriers to environmental progress. This is central to the mission of the Nicholas Institute.”


The survey of 800 registered voters found that 79 percent favored “stronger national standards to protect our land, air and water,” with 40 percent strongly supporting it.

But only 22 percent said environmental concerns have played a major role in determining whom they voted for in recent federal, state or local elections.

Even among self-described environmentalists, only 39 percent could recall an election where a candidate’s environmental stance was among the two or three most important reasons why they voted for or against him.

“There is a clear disconnect here,” Reilly said. “Seventy-four percent of
Republicans and 85 percent of Democrats say they support stronger environmental standards.... Yet, when it comes time to vote, they rank the environment low on their list of priorities.”

In focus groups, the environment ranked last out of nine issues tested, both as a vote qualifier and in terms of expressed personal importance to voters. The nine issues, in order of their expressed importance, were: the economy and jobs; health care; Iraq; Social Security; terrorism; education; moral values; taxes; and the environment. Only 10 percent of voters identified the environment as one of their top concerns, compared to 34 percent for the economy and jobs.

The research was conducted for the Nicholas Institute by Hart Associates and Public Opinion Strategies. They surveyed 800 registered voters nationwide and conducted focus groups of voters in Columbus, Ohio, and Knoxville, Tenn. The survey results have a margin of error of plus or minus 3.46 percent.

The pollsters identified five reasons for the discrepancy between voters’ support of the environment in general, and their inconsistent support of it at the ballot box:

-- Misperceptions: A majority of voters, 57 percent, believe that “a lot” or “some” progress already has been made and that environmental problems are not as bad as they used to be. Only 30 percent described themselves as “angry” about lack of action.

-- Concerns about economic trade-offs: Eighty-seven percent of voters believe it is “at least somewhat likely” that stronger national environmental standards will result in higher taxes. Fifty-six percent fear higher standards will hurt the economy and cause some people to lose their jobs.

-- Lack of immediacy: In focus groups, voters told pollsters they perceive the environment as a long-term problem that can’t compare in urgency to immediate concerns such as jobs, health care or taxes.
[ or cheap fish on sale ]

-- Breadth of issues: The environment encompasses a broad range of issues, from global warming and sustainable agriculture to water quality and urban sprawl. Few voters care about them all.

-- Personal factors: Voters’ perceptions and priorities change in response to changing circumstances and personal responsibilities. “Voters can have on the equivalent of five different pairs of glasses when they judge a policy proposal,” pollster Peter Hart said.
The issue of trust -- or lack of it -- appeared to play a role in many voters’ ambivalent attitudes toward environmental problems. Only 19 percent said there are “a lot” of trustworthy sources of information on environmental issues, while another 40 percent said there are “likely some trustworthy sources.”

" It sure jives with what we have found in our trade, doesn't it.
Everyones a professed environmentalist and hardly anyone practices it."
Steve


For more information, contact: Tim Lucas, Nicholas School of the Environment and Earth Sciences | (919) 613-8084 | [email protected]
 
A

Anonymous

Guest
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
hmmm...

well, that depends...

there's more than one way to conserve as an environmentalist other than actively affecting the source

actively affecting the way the resource is used/treated is another way ;)

one could postulate that any hobbyist who takes the time and effort to both treat the resource properly, and encourage/educate others (how) to do the same is just as important an environmentalist as those who are conserving the resource at the point of origin :)

there are LOTS of hobbyists who do that
 

clarionreef

Advanced Reefer
Location
San Francisco
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
Huh?
So taking good care of a business investment is as environmental an act...as self interest?
Every store claims to do this as Rome burns.
Who on earth would claim that taking good care of a threatened animal improperly taken is environmentalism?
Would we also say that so long as we practice good husbandry that we will therefore reduce the greed and the need to take more?
Its not nearly the same.
What it is is a sop to the conscience but for every fish or coral this trade gives long life to, Petco or something worse will take it away.
Waiting for and hoping that the mass public will catch up will be a long wait....forever in fact.
'Education as the key' is a cute, safe statement on many a brochure and yet only adresses the fewer wanting to be educated and the few who want to better things.
If self education and inspired husbandry were all we needed, then the US Fish and Wildlife Service could call it a day and go home early.

The very point of the article was that nearly everyone already claims to be for all the good things and only the few actually practice it.
Years ago I remember being proud of a collecting trip to Palawan that yielded 150 netcaught blueface angels without killing the coral....
And as we were leaving, 2 cyanide boats showed up to negate our good husbandry.
For every consciencious, educated, well intended one....there will be a far greater number in the know nothing, instant gratification economy of Petco, Costco, Walmart etc. that will never, ever go along.
Thats why we need real environmentalists and resource managers who never let the mass public decide if the reefs must die or not.
The public will say no...as their behaviours insure yes.

Its kinda like not wanting the general public to have control in the airline cockpit. They have a choice on who to fly with and they must delegate to others who are better prepared to keep them alive.
Steve
 
A

Anonymous

Guest
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
Would we also say that so long as we practice good husbandry that we will therefore reduce the greed and the need to take more?
Its not nearly the same.


bah humbug :P

you couldn't be more wrong, and you wouldn't be posting here on 99% of the subject matter, with 99% of the frequency, that you do if you truly believed that

any act of education that keeps someone from needing to add to the demand for a resource is laudable, and environmentally conscionable(sp).
 

clarionreef

Advanced Reefer
Location
San Francisco
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
If....your entire premise is based on an impossible hypothetical.
If...
If only ...
If everyone was wonderful....

so long as we practice good husbandry that we will therefore reduce the greed and the need to take more?
The qualifier is so long as we practice it....

Management is what needs to happen while waiting for the nirvana to evolve then.
Conservation...even if practiced among the elite still leaves the problem unsolved.
Steve
 
A

Anonymous

Guest
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
what does improved collection practice accomplish if collection increases ?
 

mkirda

Advanced Reefer
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
vitz":86pv6e34 said:
what does improved collection practice accomplish if collection increases ?

Improved techniques that do not damage the reef can actually help restore the reef. Improved reef can have higher carrying capacity, hence support higher extraction rates.

Everything here is predicated on having data though.

Regards.
Mike Kirda
 
A

Anonymous

Guest
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
the point i'm trying to bring up is that a coin has more than one side
 

Sponsor Reefs

We're a FREE website, and we exist because of hobbyists like YOU who help us run this community.

Click here to sponsor $10:


Top