Scientific Reports (Jul 2022)

Cooperative phenotype predicts climate change belief and pro-environmental behaviour

  • Scott Claessens,
  • Daniel Kelly,
  • Chris G. Sibley,
  • Ananish Chaudhuri,
  • Quentin D. Atkinson

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-16937-2
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

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Abstract Understanding the psychological causes of variation in climate change belief and pro-environmental behaviour remains an urgent challenge for the social sciences. The “cooperative phenotype” is a stable psychological preference for cooperating in social dilemmas that involve a tension between individual and collective interest. Since climate change poses a social dilemma on a global scale, this issue may evoke similar psychological processes as smaller social dilemmas. Here, we investigate the relationships between the cooperative phenotype and climate change belief and behaviour with a representative sample of New Zealanders (N = 897). By linking behaviour in a suite of economic games to self-reported climate attitudes, we show robust positive associations between the cooperative phenotype and both climate change belief and pro-environmental behaviour. Furthermore, our structural equation models support a motivated reasoning account in which the relationship between the cooperative phenotype and pro-environmental behaviour is mediated by climate change belief. These findings suggest that common psychological mechanisms underlie cooperation in both micro-scale social dilemmas and larger-scale social dilemmas like climate change.