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Every day is earth day: Evidence on the long-term impact of environmental activism

By: Hungerman, Daniel and Moorthy, Vivek.
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookPublisher: American Economic Journal: Applied Economics Description: 15(1), Jan, 2023: p.230-258. In: American Economic Journal: Applied EconomicsSummary: We use variation in weather to study the long-term effects of activism during the original Earth Day on attitudes, environmental outcomes, and children's health. Unusually bad weather on April 22, 1970 is associated with weaker support for the environment 10 to 20 years later, particularly among those who were school aged in 1970. Bad weather on Earth Day is also associated with higher levels of carbon monoxide in the air and greater risk of congenital abnormalities in infants born in the following decades. These results identify benefits to volunteer activity that would be impossible to identify until years after the volunteering occurs. – Reproduced
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Articles Articles Indian Institute of Public Administration
15(1), Jan, 2023: p.230-258 Available AR128494

We use variation in weather to study the long-term effects of activism during the original Earth Day on attitudes, environmental outcomes, and children's health. Unusually bad weather on April 22, 1970 is associated with weaker support for the environment 10 to 20 years later, particularly among those who were school aged in 1970. Bad weather on Earth Day is also associated with higher levels of carbon monoxide in the air and greater risk of congenital abnormalities in infants born in the following decades. These results identify benefits to volunteer activity that would be impossible to identify until years after the volunteering occurs. – Reproduced

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