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1 March 2012 Public attitudes toward biofuels
Michael A. Cacciatore, Andrew R. Binder, Dietram A. Scheufele, Bret R. Shaw
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

Despite large-scale investments and government mandates to expand biofuels development and infrastructure in the United States, little is known about how the public conceives of this alternative fuel technology. This study examines public opinion of biofuels by focusing on citizen knowledge and the motivated processing of media information. Specifically, we explore the direct effects of biofuels knowledge and the moderating effect of partisanship on the relationship between media use and benefit vs. risk perceptions in the following four domains: environmental impacts, economic consequences, ethical/social implications, and political ramifications. Our results suggest that more knowledgeable respondents see fewer benefits of biofuels relative to risks, and that Democrats and Republicans are affected differently by media use when forming opinions about biofuels. Among Democrats, greater attention to political media content leads to a more favorable outlook toward the technology across several domains of interest, while among Republicans, an increase in attention to political content has the opposite effect. Possible reasons for these results, as well as implications of the findings at the intersection of politics and the life sciences, are discussed.

Association for Politics and the Life Sciences
Michael A. Cacciatore, Andrew R. Binder, Dietram A. Scheufele, and Bret R. Shaw "Public attitudes toward biofuels," Politics and the Life Sciences 31(1), 36-51, (1 March 2012). https://doi.org/10.2990/31_1-2_36
Published: 1 March 2012
JOURNAL ARTICLE
16 PAGES

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KEYWORDS
Biofuels
motivated reasoning
partisanship
public opinion
risk perceptions
science knowledge
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