Full Text Available

Note: Clicking the button above will open the full text document at the original institutional repository in a new window.

Do low-income groups respond more positively to “climate justice” than to other terms from the public discourse about climate change and sustainability? Evidence from a survey-based wording experiment with a representative Los Angeles County sample

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:PLOS Climate
Format: Online Article RSS Article
Published: 2026
Subjects:
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1867301678117552130
collection WordPress RSS
FRELIP Feed Integration
container_title PLOS Climate
description
discipline_display Climate Change
discipline_facet Climate Change
format Online Article
RSS Article
genre Journal Article
id rss_article:79546
institution FRELIP
journal_source_facet PLOS Climate
publishDate 2026
publishDateSort 2026
record_format rss_article
spellingShingle Do low-income groups respond more positively to “climate justice” than to other terms from the public discourse about climate change and sustainability? Evidence from a survey-based wording experiment with a representative Los Angeles County sample
Climate Change
General
Climate Change
sub_discipline_display General
sub_discipline_facet General
subject_display Climate Change
General
Climate Change
Climate Change
General
Climate Change
subject_facet Climate Change
General
Climate Change
title Do low-income groups respond more positively to “climate justice” than to other terms from the public discourse about climate change and sustainability? Evidence from a survey-based wording experiment with a representative Los Angeles County sample
title_auth Do low-income groups respond more positively to “climate justice” than to other terms from the public discourse about climate change and sustainability? Evidence from a survey-based wording experiment with a representative Los Angeles County sample
title_full Do low-income groups respond more positively to “climate justice” than to other terms from the public discourse about climate change and sustainability? Evidence from a survey-based wording experiment with a representative Los Angeles County sample
title_fullStr Do low-income groups respond more positively to “climate justice” than to other terms from the public discourse about climate change and sustainability? Evidence from a survey-based wording experiment with a representative Los Angeles County sample
title_full_unstemmed Do low-income groups respond more positively to “climate justice” than to other terms from the public discourse about climate change and sustainability? Evidence from a survey-based wording experiment with a representative Los Angeles County sample
title_short Do low-income groups respond more positively to “climate justice” than to other terms from the public discourse about climate change and sustainability? Evidence from a survey-based wording experiment with a representative Los Angeles County sample
title_sort do low-income groups respond more positively to “climate justice” than to other terms from the public discourse about climate change and sustainability? evidence from a survey-based wording experiment with a representative los angeles county sample
topic Climate Change
General
Climate Change
url https://journals.plos.org/climate/article?id=10.1371/journal.pclm.0000905