Abstract

Having children is a transformative experience and may change the way people think about the future. Parents invest time, energy and resources to ensure the survival and reproductive success of offspring. Having children may also induce environmental concerns and investments in actions aimed at guaranteeing the quality of natural resources available to offspring. However, there is limited empirical support for this parenthood effect, and little is known about how environmental attitudes and behaviour change over time following the birth of a child. This pre-registered study uses data from the first seven waves (2009–2015) of the New Zealand Attitudes and Values Study—a longitudinal national probability study of social attitudes, personality, and health outcomes—with multilevel interrupted time series analysis. Respondents’ belief in the reality and causes of climate change, sacrifices to standard of living to protect the environment, and changes in daily routine to protect the environment did not change significantly following the birth of a child; and nor were there changes in the underlying trends of attitudes or pre-birth anticipation effects. The study further found no gender differences in the attitudinal effects of childbirth. Additional exploratory analyses suggest that becoming a parent for the first time may increase beliefs in the reality of climate change but does not appear to change other environmental attitudes. Overall, our findings provide little empirical evidence for parenthood effects on environmentalism.

Highlights

  • Parenting takes time, energy and resources but pays off evolutionarily because parental investment increases the survival and reproductive success of offspring to which parents are genetically related

  • Since the survival and reproductive success of offspring is dependent on the availability and quality of natural resources, it is reasonable to expect that parental investment in offspring must incur considerations about the future of such resources

  • While there was an increase in agreement that climate change is real and caused by humans over time [see 33], we did not find evidence that there is a change in this trend from before to after the birth of a child

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Summary

Introduction

Energy and resources but pays off evolutionarily because parental investment increases the survival and reproductive success of offspring to which parents are genetically related. Since the survival and reproductive success of offspring is dependent on the availability and quality of natural resources, it is reasonable to expect that parental investment in offspring must incur considerations about the future of such resources. Support for this expectation emerges from findings indicating that parenthood may increase environmental. Regarding requests for data access may be found here: https://www.auckland.ac.nz/en/about/ research/re-ethics/re-uahpec.html

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