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Skala troski o środowisko×Skala Postaw wobec Zmian Klimatu×
DziedzinaPsychologia środowiskowaPsychologia środowiskowa
RodzinaProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Rok powstania19782019
TwórcaRussell H. Weigel and Jeanette WeigelHui Li, Marianne C. Monroe
TypSelf-report Likert scaleSelf-report belief and attitude scale
Źródło pierwotneWeigel, R. H., & Weigel, J. (1978). Environmental concern: The development of a measure. Environment and Behavior, 10(1), 3–15. DOI ↗Li, H., & Monroe, M. C. (2019). Development and validation of the Climate Change Attitude Scale (CCAS). Climatic Change, 152(3–4), 601–613. link ↗
Inne nazwyECS, Environmental Attitudes InventoryCCAS, Climate Attitude Scale
Pokrewne34
PodsumowanieThe Environmental Concern Scale (ECS) measures the degree to which individuals worry about and feel affected by environmental problems, pollution, and ecological degradation. Originally developed by Weigel and Weigel (1978), the ECS focuses on emotional and affective responses to environmental issues—anxiety, worry, and perceived personal threat from pollution—rather than abstract values or beliefs. The scale is widely used in public opinion research, conservation communication effectiveness studies, and assessing emotional responses to environmental threats like climate change and air pollution.The Climate Change Attitude Scale (CCAS) measures individuals' beliefs about climate change causation, severity, and human responsibility, as well as attitudes toward climate action and climate policy. Developed by Li and Monroe (2019) as an extension of general environmental attitude scales, the CCAS focuses specifically on climate change perceptions—whether individuals believe climate change is real, anthropogenic (human-caused), severe, and actionable. The scale is essential for tracking public opinion on climate, identifying populations skeptical of climate science, evaluating climate communication campaign effectiveness, and examining links between climate beliefs and policy support or climate action.
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ScholarGatePorównaj metody: ECS · CCAS. Pobrano 2026-06-18 z https://scholargate.app/pl/compare