Building Consensus for Ambitious Climate Action through the World
Climate Simulation
Abstract
Sociopolitical values are an important driver of climate change beliefs,
attitudes, and policy preferences. People with
‘individualist-hierarchical’ values favor individual freedom,
competition, and clearly defined social hierarchies, while
communitarian-egalitarians value interdependence and equality across
gender, age, heritage, and ethnicity. In the US, individualist-hierarchs
generally perceive less risk from climate change and express lower
support for actions to mitigate it than communitarian-egalitarians.
Exposure to scientific information does little to change these views.
Here, we ask if a widely-used experiential simulation, World Climate,
can help overcome these barriers. World Climate combines an engaging
role-play with an interactive computer model of the climate system. We
examine pre- and post-World Climate survey responses from 2,080
participants in the US and use a general linear mixed model approach to
analyze interactions among participants’ sociopolitical values and gains
in climate change knowledge, affect, and intent to take action. As
expected, prior to the simulation, participants holding
individualist-hierarchical values had lower levels of climate change
knowledge, felt less urgency, and expressed lower intent to act than
those holding communitarian-egalitarian values. However,
individualist-hierarchs made significantly larger gains across all
constructs, particularly urgency, than communitarian-egalitarians.
Participants’ sociopolitical values also shifted: those with
individualistic-hierarchical values before the simulation showed a
substantial, statistically significant shift toward a
communitarian-egalitarian worldview. Simulation-based experiences like
World Climate may help reduce polarization and build consensus towards
science-based climate action.