PORTRAIT OF A CLIMATE DENIER, Sen. Inhofe: Sociologists have found that conservative white males are more likely to question the validity of climate change science. Image: U.S. Senate Committee on Environmental and Public WorksBy Julia Pyper and ClimateWire 
5 October 2011

When it comes to climate change denial, not all human beings are created equal. As a recent study shows, conservative white males are less likely to believe in climate change. “It’s not surprising,” said Aaron McCright, sociology professor at Michigan State University, who is a white male himself. But anecdotal evidence is not scientific, he said. “You really don’t know what’s going on until you crunch the numbers and find out.” Besides the trend amongst skeptics, the study also found that conservative white men who self-report a high understanding of global warming — dubbed “confident” conservative males — are even more likely to express climate change denial. McCright’s study, “Cool dudes: The denial of climate change among conservative white males in the United States,” was published online in July and printed in the October 2011 issue of Global Environmental Change, which ranks first out of 77 journals on environmental studies. The study has created somewhat of a buzz, said Riley Dunlap, co-author and professor of sociology at Oklahoma State University. The paper was well received in academic circles, but he admitted he was concerned about a backlash from the conservative movement. While there have not been any major outcries, the study appears to have raised a few temperatures in Chicago. “This paper is a transparent effort to take the focus off the actual scientific debate and instead engage in race baiting, class baiting and other sociological devices to win a science argument,” said James Taylor, senior fellow for environment policy at the Chicago-based Heartland Institute. But from McCright’s perspective it was important to find out to what extent the sharp debate over climate change at the elite level had trickled down into the general public in recent decades. “Within the ranks of elites, climate change denialists are overwhelmingly conservative white males,” reads the report, pointing to figures like talk show host Rush Limbaugh and Marshall Institute CEO, William O’Keefe. “Does a similar pattern exist in the American public?” […]

Why Conservative White Males Are More Likely to Be Climate Skeptics