Key findings: How Americans’ attitudes about climate change differ by generation, party and other factors
Majorities of Americans say the federal government, businesses and other actors are doing too little to reduce the effects of climate change.
Numbers, Facts and Trends Shaping Your World
Majorities of Americans say the federal government, businesses and other actors are doing too little to reduce the effects of climate change.
Majorities of Americans support an array of measures to address climate change but stop short of a full break with fossil fuels.
One-in-ten U.S. adults say they have taken part in citizen science in the past year, and 26% say they have ever done so.
Republicans ages 18 to 39 are more likely than their GOP elders to think humans have a large role in climate change.
A majority of U.S. adults say they are taking at least some specific action in their daily lives to protect the environment, though Democrats and Republicans remain at ideological odds over the causes of climate change and the effects of policies to address it.
For Earth Day 2020, we take stock of public opinion in the United States about global climate change and the environment.
As in 2016, 88% of U.S. adults say its benefits outweigh the risks. And the share who consider its preventive benefits to be “very high” rose by 11 points to 56%.
About six-in-ten Americans believe social distancing measures are helping a lot to slow the spread of coronavirus in the nation.
A new survey finds that nearly one-in-four Hispanic adults are now former Catholics, while rising numbers are Protestant or unaffiliated with any religion.
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