A new analysis examines 94 studies focused on climate anxiety, involving 170,000 people across 27 countries, to explore who it is most likely to affect and what its possible consequences could be. It finds that those who are more likely to experience climate anxiety include women, young adults, people with “left-wing” views and those expressing “concerns” about nature or the “future”.

By contrast, people with the opposite characteristics to those listed above – for example, those that are older, male or hold “right-wing” political views – are less likely to report feeling climate anxiety, according to the research.

One of the research papers cited in the meta-analysis finds that people under the age of 25 who reported climate anxiety were likely to have feelings of “betrayal” aimed towards older generations and to perceive governmental response to climate change as “inadequate”.

  • Tehdastehdas@piefed.social
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    5 days ago

    … those that are older, male or hold “right-wing” political views – are less likely to report feeling …

    “Feelings are for pussies! Am I right, boys?”

    • VeganPizza69 Ⓥ@lemmy.vg
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      5 days ago

      They fear other things as proxies for their fear of death and ego death shrinkage. The people who scream “I won’t live in fear!” are the biggest cowards.