Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
SUPPORTED BY:
Minis
stry of Environment
Climate
e Change DDepartmentt
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
The Cambodian Ministry of Environment would like to thank Oxfam, Danida and UNDP
Cambodia for their financial and technical support throughout the conduct of the
Knowledge, Attitudes and Practices (KAP) study. Special thanks are due to the
members of the technical advisory group: Ms. Macarena Aguilar, Ms. Bopha Seng, Mr.
Jacob Kahl Jepsen, Mr. Kamal Uy, Ms. Mona Laczo, Mr. Sum Thy and Dr. Tin Ponlok.
The Ministry of Environment also expresses its thanks to the BBC World Service Trust.
Fieldwork was conducted by the Trust, with the assistance of a number of freelance
fieldworkers, and we are grateful to all of them.
Analysis and reporting was conducted by the Trust’s Research and Learning Group in
Cambodia and the UK. This report was compiled by Ms. Miriam Burton with contributions
from Ms. Susan Cooke, Mr. By Virak, Ms. Lizz Frost Yocum, Ms. Chiv Linna, Ms. Anna
Godfrey and Ms. Patricia Doherty, based on analysis by the authors and by Mr. Chem
Vuthy, Mr. Uy Sareth, Mr. Trak Peaseth, Mr. Heng Phoastey and Ms. Anna Colom.
i
TABLE OF CONTENTS
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS ............................................................................................. i
TABLE OF CONTENTS ............................................................................................... ii
LIST OF TABLES ........................................................................................................ iv
FOREWORD .............................................................................................................. vii
Executive Summary .................................................................................................... ix
Perceptions and coverage of climate change: what do we already know? ..................................... 1
Methodology ............................................................................................................... 5
Qualitative Research Design .......................................................................................... 5
Quantitative Research Design ........................................................................................ 5
Social Desirability Bias............................................................................................................ 7
Acquiescence Bias.................................................................................................................. 8
Qualitative and Quantitative Comparative Limitations ............................................................ 8
Survey sample limitations ....................................................................................................... 8
Key Findings ............................................................................................................. 11
What do Cambodians know and think about climate change? .................................................. 11
Extreme weather events ............................................................................................... 12
Changes in the weather ................................................................................................ 16
Knowledge and understanding of ‘climate change’...................................................... 18
Climate change terminology ................................................................................................. 19
Understanding the causes of climate change ....................................................................... 22
Weather change and human activity .................................................................................... 23
Understanding the impacts of climate change ...................................................................... 25
Concerns about the changing weather and environment ............................................ 26
Family life, work and agriculture ........................................................................................... 27
Livelihoods and climate change ............................................................................................ 28
Water resources and climate change ................................................................................... 30
How do Cambodians think they can respond? ..................................................................... 32
What are Cambodians already doing to respond? ............................................................... 34
Community responses to the changing weather .................................................................. 35
How people would respond to the impact on their work ....................................................... 36
Levels of self-efficacy and collective efficacy in responding to climate change ................... 37
Positive perceptions of capacity to respond to climate change ............................................ 37
Resources needed to help people cope ............................................................................... 37
Who is responding to climate change? ................................................................................. 38
Sources of information .................................................................................................. 38
Trusted information sources ................................................................................................. 39
Media combinations ...................................................................................................... 41
Radio habits .......................................................................................................................... 41
Radio stations ....................................................................................................................... 42
Radio listening by duration and time..................................................................................... 42
Calling in to a phone-in ......................................................................................................... 43
TV habits ............................................................................................................................... 43
TV viewing by duration and time ........................................................................................... 44
TV channels .......................................................................................................................... 44
Mobile phone use.................................................................................................................. 44
Mobile phone access ............................................................................................................ 45
Mobile phone ownership ....................................................................................................... 45
Mobile phone networks ......................................................................................................... 46
Messaging ............................................................................................................................. 46
Print media ............................................................................................................................ 47
Internet Use .......................................................................................................................... 47
ii
DVD and VCD ....................................................................................................................... 47
Outreach Activities ................................................................................................................ 48
Understanding climate change ..................................................................................... 49
Perceived causes.................................................................................................................. 50
Perceived impacts................................................................................................................. 52
How does the public perceive climate change? ........................................................... 53
Where does responsibility lie? ...................................................................................... 54
What response is required? .......................................................................................... 56
Key informants on climate change: by group ............................................................... 57
Government representatives, senators and parliamentarians .............................................. 57
Provincial governors ............................................................................................................. 61
Commune council leaders .................................................................................................... 64
Village chiefs and elders ....................................................................................................... 68
Celebrities ............................................................................................................................. 71
Industry representatives........................................................................................................ 73
Media representatives........................................................................................................... 75
NGO representatives ............................................................................................................ 77
Religious leaders .................................................................................................................. 79
Conclusions............................................................................................................... 82
Recommendations .................................................................................................... 83
Bibliography .............................................................................................................. 88
Appendix 1: Methodology ......................................................................................... 90
Appendix 2: List of Tables......................................................................................... 96
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LIST OF TABLES
Table 1: Socio-demographic profile .................................................................................. 96
Table 2: Socio-demographic profile by gender and residence ........................................ 97
Table 3: Extreme weather events in the past year (Frequency Table) ............................ 98
Table 4: “Thinking about the past year, please tell me whether you have experienced
one or more of the following extreme weather events” .................................................... 99
Table 5: “Which of these events had the most serious impact on your life?” ................ 100
Table 6: Did you receive any information about the event you mentioned? ................. 101
Table 7: In general, do you ever get information from the weather report? .................. 102
Table 8: When did you hear about the event? ............................................................... 103
Table 9: Source of information on extreme weather event (Frequency Table) ............. 104
Table 10: Where did you get this information from? ...................................................... 105
Table 11: How would information have helped you to prepare for such an event?
(Frequency Table)........................................................................................................... 106
Table 12: Thinking about your entire life, which of the following are true?.................... 106
Table 13: Thinking about your entire life, which of the following are true? (Part I) ....... 107
Table 14: Thinking about your entire life, which of the following are true? (Part II) ...... 108
Table 15: When you think about natural resources in Cambodia, what would you say are
the three most important natural resources? ................................................................. 109
Table 16: Priorities for Cambodia ................................................................................... 110
Table 17: Have you ever heard the term ‘climate change’? .......................................... 111
Table 18: Have you ever heard the term ‘global warming’? .......................................... 112
Table 19: Which term are you more familiar with? ......................................................... 113
Table 20: For the term [climate change]: could you please tell me as much about it as
you can? .......................................................................................................................... 114
Table 21: For the term [global warming]: could you please tell me as much about it as
you can? .......................................................................................................................... 115
Table 22: Would you please tell me where you heard the term [climate change/global
warming]?........................................................................................................................ 116
Table 23: What do you think causes the weather patterns to change in Cambodia?
(Frequency Table)........................................................................................................... 117
Table 24: What do you think causes the weather patterns to change in Cambodia? ... 118
Table 25: To what extent do you agree or disagree with the statement? “Some people
are saying that human activities are causing weather patterns around the world to
change over time” ........................................................................................................... 119
Table 26: Do you think your actions contribute to causing climate change? ............... 120
Table 27: How do your actions contribute to causing climate change? ........................ 121
Table 28: How do your actions contribute to causing climate change? ........................ 122
Table 29: Do you think climate change affects Cambodia now? ................................... 123
Table 30: Do you think climate change will affect Cambodia in the future? .................. 124
Table 31: What in your opinion are/will be the effects of climate change here in
Cambodia? (Frequency Table) ....................................................................................... 125
Table 32: What in your opinion are the effects of climate change here in Cambodia? . 126
Table 33: What consequences do the changes in weather have for the life of you and
your family? ..................................................................................................................... 127
Table 34: To what extent has your work been affected by changes in the weather? ... 128
Table 35: To what extent do you agree that you are able to respond to the changing
weather? ......................................................................................................................... 129
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Table 36: To what extent do you agree that your community can respond to the
changing weather?.......................................................................................................... 130
Table 37: The ability to access water ............................................................................. 131
Table 38: The quality of water ........................................................................................ 132
Table 39: Do people think they have sufficient water for work and personal use? ....... 133
Table 40: Would you say you and your family have the water you need to do your work?
......................................................................................................................................... 134
Table 41: Does climate change affect human health? ................................................... 135
Table 42: What are the effects on health? (Frequency Table) ...................................... 136
Table 43: What can people do in response to the changing weather? (Frequency Table)
......................................................................................................................................... 137
Table 44: What can people do in response to the changing weather? (Part I) ............. 138
Table 45: What can people do in response to the changing weather? (Part II) ............ 139
Table 46: Have you or someone in your family done anything to respond to the changing
weather? ......................................................................................................................... 140
Table 47: What have you/they done in response? (Frequency Table) .......................... 141
Table 48: What have you/they done in response?......................................................... 142
Table 49: Have people in your community done anything in response to the changing
weather? ......................................................................................................................... 143
Table 50: What are they doing? ..................................................................................... 144
Table 51: What are they doing? ..................................................................................... 145
Table 52: If weather changes were to get worse, how would you respond to the impact of
these changes on your work? (Frequency Table) .......................................................... 146
Table 53: What resources are needed to help people cope? ........................................ 147
Table 54: What resources are needed to help people cope? (By gender) .................... 148
Table 55: What resources are needed to help people cope? (By residence) ............... 149
Table 56: What resources are needed to help people cope? (By Progress out of Poverty
Index) .............................................................................................................................. 150
Table 57: To what extent do you agree that changing weather brings benefits to you and
your family? ..................................................................................................................... 151
Table 58: To what extent do you agree that you can find the information you need to
respond to the changing weather? ................................................................................. 152
Table 59: To what extent do you agree that your community can respond to the
changing weather?.......................................................................................................... 153
Table 60: To what extent do you agree that your community has the resources they
need to respond to the changing weather? .................................................................... 154
Table 61: To what extent do you agree that your community is able to respond to
drought? .......................................................................................................................... 155
Table 62: To what extent do you agree that your community is able to respond to floods?
......................................................................................................................................... 156
Table 63: What would you say are the barriers to taking action to respond to the impact
of weather changes? ...................................................................................................... 157
Table 64: Do you know of any individual, organisation or government department that is
working to respond to the changing weather? ............................................................... 158
Table 65: Who has the most power to respond to the changing weather? (Frequency
Table) .............................................................................................................................. 159
Table 66: Who has the most power to respond to the changing weather? ................... 160
Table 67: Is there anything you think your government can do to help you cope with the
problem of the changing weather? ................................................................................. 161
Table 68: What can the government do? ....................................................................... 162
Table 69: Where do you get information from, and which sources do you trust? ......... 163
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Table 70: Where do you get information from? .............................................................. 164
Table 71: Have you ever used the Internet? .................................................................. 165
Table 72: When was the last time you listened to radio? .............................................. 166
Table 73: Radio programmes ......................................................................................... 167
Table 74: Radio stations ................................................................................................. 168
Table 75: Radio listening by day .................................................................................... 169
Table 76: Radio listening by time ................................................................................... 169
Table 77: Radio listening by duration ............................................................................. 170
Table 78: Have you ever listened to a phone-in programme? ....................................... 170
Table 79: Have you ever called in to a phone-in programme? ...................................... 170
Table 80: Why have you called in to a phone-in programme? ...................................... 171
Table 81: When was the last time you watched TV? ..................................................... 172
Table 82: What programme(s) do you usually watch?................................................... 173
Table 83: What day(s) do you usually watch TV? .......................................................... 173
Table 84: How many times per day do you watch TV? How long do you watch TV for
each time you watch it? .................................................................................................. 174
Table 85: What time do you usually watch TV? ............................................................. 174
Table 86: Which TV stations/channels do you watch? .................................................. 175
Table 87: Which channel do you prefer to watch? ......................................................... 175
Table 88: Do you have access to a mobile phone? ....................................................... 176
Table 89: Whose phone do you have access to? .......................................................... 177
Table 90: Which network/mobile phone company do you use? .................................... 178
Table 91: Mobile functions used (Frequency Table) ...................................................... 179
Table 92: Mobile functions used ..................................................................................... 180
Table 93: What kind of message do you use? ............................................................... 181
Table 94: When was the last time you used the Internet? ............................................. 182
Table 95: What do you use the Internet for? .................................................................. 183
Table 96: Where do you use the Internet? ..................................................................... 184
Table 97: When was the last time you watched a VCD/DVD? ...................................... 185
Table 98: Which programmes do you usually watch? ................................................... 186
Table 99: Where do you usually watch? (Frequency Table) ......................................... 187
Table 100: Usually, where do you watch? ..................................................................... 188
Table 101: Have you ever heard of outreach activities? ................................................ 189
Table 102: When was the last time you participated in outreach activities? ................. 190
Table 103: Have you ever participated in the following outreach activities? ................. 191
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FOREWORD
Climate change is no longer a myth. It is happening and all of us in Cambodia
are particularly vulnerable to its worst possible effects due to our limited adaptive
capacity. Addressing climate change has been emerging as a priority of the
Royal Government of Cambodia, as evidenced in the National Strategic
Development Plan Update 2009-2013.
Experience around the world has shown that raising awareness about climate
change is challenging. Especially in poorer countries like Cambodia, competing
priorities can be a hurdle to creating a healthy sense of urgency among the
public.
The report you are about to read reveals, however, that our collective knowledge
and understanding about its basic science, its causes and impacts are still
limited.
We believe the stage is now set for a concerted enterprise to guarantee that all
Cambodians have access to reliable information about climate change. And we
know the information to be conveyed needs to be understandable and relevant
but also delivered with a sense of purpose.
It is with this in mind and the commitment to bring ordinary Cambodians back to
the centre of our actions and dialogue about climate change that we embarked
on this journey throughout the country. We worked with the BBC World Service
Trust (the Trust) and benefited from the support of Oxfam, DANIDA and the
UNDP. The Trust study team travelled to our twenty-four provinces and spoke to
men and women from farming and fishing communities, teachers, business
people, housewives, village chiefs and government officials. They asked
communities and authorities about their experiences with the changing weather
in the past year and as far as they could remember. They inquired about their
knowledge and the associations they made when hearing different terms used to
vii
describe climate change. The Trust team also noted who and what most people
trusted and relied upon to make informed decisions about issues that affect their
lives.
Finally, I hope the follow-up actions to this study will help build a Cambodian
society better equipped to adapt to the impacts of climate change and to
participate in the collective mitigation efforts.
viii
Executive Summary
In 2010, the BBC World Service Trust’s Research and Learning Group, on behalf of the
Cambodian Ministry of Environment, conducted research in all 24 provinces of
Cambodia to explore public perceptions of climate change. The research consisted of a
nationally representative survey of 2401 Cambodians and in-depth interviews with 101
key informants from media, industry, national and provincial governments, non-
governmental organizations, celebrities, and local leaders including commune council
leaders, village chiefs and elders, and religious leaders.
Cambodians believe that their weather is changing,1 yet the findings suggest some
important gaps in people’s understanding of what has caused the weather to change.
Almost everyone recognises at least one of the terms ‘climate change’ and ‘global
warming’. Broadcast media and word-of-mouth are the sources of both terms for most
people. Yet climate change terminology appears to be poorly understood by most survey
respondents and by the key informants interviewed for the research. Most respondents
associate the terms ‘climate change’ and ‘global warming’ with local deforestation,
disease, and an increase in temperature.
There is a stronger focus on the impacts of weather change than on the causes.
Cambodians say that their weather and environment are changing and that people are
feeling the effects. They think that extreme weather events are more frequent and more
intense than they once were, and that temperatures have increased. Most people
associate weather changes with disease, farming difficulties, drought, increasing
temperatures, decreased yields and water shortages. Almost everyone says their work is
affected by the changing weather, and most say they lack the water they need for their
work.
All key informants say they have observed weather changes over the course of their
lifetimes. These include less predictable seasons, diminished rainfall, hotter
temperatures, more storms, more frequent and severe flooding and more frequent
thunder and lightning.
1 The findings indicate that few respondents understand the scientific basis for climate change. However, responses to a
number of questions on the survey suggest that people have observed weather changes over their lifetimes, and most
Cambodian key informants interviewed for the research say that the weather has changed. In addition, one term in Khmer
translates both ‘climate’ and ‘weather’, which makes it difficult to identify which of the terms a respondent is using. For
these reasons, throughout the report we use the term ‘weather’ unless we are certain that respondents are referring to the
term ‘climate’.
ix
key informants indicate some important misconceptions in the ways in which these
factors are understood. When prompted, 72% of survey respondents agree that human
activities are causing weather patterns around the world to change over time. One third
(33%) of people say that their own actions contribute to climate change.
Most key informants connect climate change to localized pollution from industry, motor
vehicles and other machinery; the use of chemicals, particularly fertilisers; and the
production of smoke, particularly from cars and other motor vehicles. Only some key
informants, mostly national government and NGO representatives, make direct links
between the causes and effects of climate change.
People are uncertain whether the changes they have experienced in their
everyday lives are long-term. Of those people who know the term ‘climate change’,
98% say that climate change is affecting their country now, and 75%, that climate
change will affect Cambodia in the future. Yet 22% say that they do not know whether
Cambodia will feel the impacts of climate change in the future. This uncertainty could
have implications for the coping strategies that people devise to address the impacts of
weather changes on their lives and livelihoods.
Although many key informants are concerned about the potential impacts of climate
change in Cambodia, most think that the country is not yet as badly affected as other
countries. Even among those with a limited understanding of the concept of climate
change, there is a feeling that Cambodia will eventually experience its impacts, as other
countries have done already.
Many say they do not have the information they need to respond. A quarter of
people say they do not know how they can respond to the changing weather, while
suggestions for responses focus on short-term measures. More than half of people think
they are unable to respond to the changing weather (59%) and do not have the
information they need to respond (52%). The three most important barriers to
responding identified by the Cambodians surveyed are a lack of money, lack of tools and
a lack of information. More women, rural Cambodians, poorer people and those with the
least education say they lack the information they need to respond. The comments of
village chiefs and commune council leaders reflect these findings.
More than 8 in 10 Cambodians are media consumers and broadcast media are among
the most trusted sources of information. Most watch the TV and listen to the radio, and
nearly everyone has access to a mobile phone.
Climate change receives relatively little attention from the Cambodian media and
is largely treated as an environmental issue, say key informants. All media
representatives interviewed agree that there is a need to approach climate change
x
stories from new angles, give journalists training on the subject and provide guidance on
how to approach the topic.
Cambodians look to the government, the Prime Minister and NGOs to provide
leadership in responding to their changing weather. Yet a current lack of awareness
among the public of any individual or organization working to respond to the problem
suggests they do not know of existing national and local programmes to respond to
climate change. The comments of key informants suggest that those best placed to
inform their communities about the issue – village chiefs, commune council leaders, and
religious figures – are not as well informed about the issue as those in national
government. Provincial governors could play a key role, as the provincial governors who
participated in the research make the most diverse range of connections between
climate change and other aspects of society of all key informants interviewed.
Many Cambodians are therefore making decisions about how they respond
without receiving information or support from any source outside their immediate
communities. Strong coordination of climate change programming and information
provision, from national government to village level, will bring benefits to populations
currently struggling to respond.
xi
Background to the Research
Climate change is one of the most important issues on the global political and economic
agenda. The poorest people are most vulnerable to the impacts of climate change, as a
result of a combination of economic, physical and social factors. Their response to
climate change is hampered by a lack of relevant, useful information and, too often, their
voices have been absent from the international climate change debate.
In this context, the Cambodian Climate Change Department of the Royal Government of
Cambodia's Ministry of Environment, with support from Danida, Oxfam and the UNDP,
commissioned the Research and Learning Group at the BBC World Service Trust to
conduct a nationwide study to explore knowledge, attitudes and practices in relation to
climate change.
2. To identify the ways in which Cambodians explain the causes of their changing
weather, and the impact that such changes have on their lives.
The study has gathered and documented experiences across the country related to
people’s perceptions of changes in climate, environment, and natural resources. The
report draws on these findings to provide recommendations for raising public awareness
about climate change in Cambodia and engaging policymakers and the general public in
local, national, and international dialogue and actions related to climate change.
Research in the United States has shown that a limited understanding of climate change
can restrict people’s ability to distinguish between effective and ineffective response
1
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
strategies. 2 Similarly, a lack of appropriate information regarding climate change is seen
as a critical barrier in dealing with its effects on livelihoods in sub-Saharan Africa. 3,4
However, the public perception of climate change is still a relatively new topic for
research, and has been limited by a number of factors. In this respect, the Cambodian
context is no different.
2
Climate Change in the American Mind, A Leiserowitz et al, Centre for Climate Change Communication, George Mason
University, 2009
3
Micro-Level Analysis of Farmers’ Adaptation to Climate Change in Southern Africa, Nhemachena, C., and R. Hassan,
IFPRI Discussion Paper No. 714, Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute, 2007.
4
The Perception of and Adaptation to Climate Change in Africa, David J Maddison, World Bank Policy Research Working
Paper no. 4038, 2007
5
Africa Talks Climate, BBC World Service Trust, 2010
6
Blowing hot or cold?: South African attitudes to climate change, J. Seager, 2008, HSRC Review, South Africa
7
The study detailed in the National Adaptation Programme of Action to Climate Change, Cambodia Ministry of
Environment, Phnom Penh, Cambodia, (2006), the most extensive research on the subject to have been carried out until
now, surveyed 684 households in 17 provinces of the country.
8
National Adaptation Programme of Action to Climate Change, Cambodia Ministry of Environment, Phnom Penh,
Cambodia, 2006
2
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Findings from several studies 9 , 10 suggest a generally low level of awareness of the
specific causes and impacts of climate change. The same studies indicate that
Cambodian respondents understand the term ‘climate change’ 11 in the context of
localized changes in weather, rather than global climate change, and attribute these to
localized deforestation. These findings are reflected n a 2004 study carried out in the
UK, 12 and by a 2010 study on the public understanding of climate change in 10
countries in Africa.13
Most of the Cambodian research finds that people believe that the weather is changing,
and two studies 14, 15 find that most people think they will be affected by climate change.
Indochina’s i-Trak survey identifies a popular connection between the term ‘climate
change’ and health, 16 while another study 17 indicates concern among farmers about
changes in rain patterns, decreased rainfall, drought, diminished agricultural yields and
shortages of water for agricultural purposes.
The results of a small-scale survey 18 carried out among callers to the Cambodian
Centre for Independent Media (CCIM)’s Earth Talk radio programme suggest that young
educated Cambodians are interested in issues such as illegal logging and dumping and
want more information on similar issues.
Projects such as the CCIM radio phone-in programme point to the role that media has to
play in raising awareness and providing information on climate change. Yet a recent
publication 19 suggests that journalists in developing countries face a number of
challenges in their coverage of climate change.
The report identifies a lack of training, a lack of support from editors, and limited access
to information and people to interview. It suggests that climate change programming
needs to move into new areas, addressing ‘political, economic and human interest
stories’, and move away from pure environmental programming. It emphasises that while
news coverage of climate change in non-industrialized countries is increasing, the
quantity and quality of reporting does not match the scale of the problem.
It goes on to point out that a reliance on reports from Western news agencies, rather
than locally relevant news, as well as sparse coverage of adaptation measures means
that audiences, particularly the world’s poor, are being underserved. Finally, it hints at
the potentially important role non-news media (such as talk shows, dramas and public
9
Ibid.
10
Public perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia, Danish Church Aid and Christian Aid, Cambodia, 2009
11
Where the terms ‘climate change’ and ‘global warming’ appear between quotation marks, it indicates a reference to the
Khmer terms ‘Kar PreProul Akas Theat’ and ‘Kar Leung Kamdao Phen Dey’ respectively. Further detail is provided on
p35 in the section Translating climate change.
12
Measuring Awareness of Climate Change, Report on Stage 1 of ESPACE project Adapting to Climate Change: Raising
Community Awareness in West Sussex, West Sussex County Council, UK, 2005
13
Africa Talks Climate, BBC World Service Trust, 2010
14
National Survey: Perception of climate change in Cambodia, Elizabeth Smith and Nop Polin, Geres, 2007.
97% of those who had heard the term ‘climate change’ believed they would be affected and 61% of these were ‘very
concerned’ about climate change.
15
See The Heat is On, I-TRAK survey, Indochina Research, 2010: http://www.indochinaresearch.com/i-
trak/reports.php In Cambodia, 200 residents of Phnom Penh were surveyed.
16
Ibid.
17
Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia, Geres, December 2009. Conducted in Kompong Chhnang,
Kompong Speu, Prey Veng and Battambang provinces.
18
See People’s Recommendations on Climate Change via Radio Talk, by the Cambodian Centre for Independent Media,
2009.
19
Time to Adapt? Media Coverage of Climate Change in Non-Industrialised Countries, Mike Shanahan, 2009
3
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
service announcements) can play in providing information to audiences on climate
change.
However, any information provision must take into account people’s understanding of
climate change. Unfortunately, the research community has not come to a consensus on
what constitutes ‘knowledge’ of climate change. If someone in Cambodia correctly
identifies a series of projected impacts of ‘climate change’ (when the words for ‘climate’
and ‘weather’ are much the same in Khmer), but does not understand the causes of
global climate change, can we say that this individual has an ‘experiential understanding’
of climate change, or simply that they are highly aware of the weather patterns?
When most people’s understanding of climate change relates to changes they see
around them – changes that shape their livelihoods and their lives – the message they
receive about climate change must reflect this understanding.
4
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Methodology
The study used a combination of qualitative and quantitative methods.
Written transcripts were produced from the recordings of these interviews. The Khmer
transcripts were then translated into English to enable the international team to work
together. These transcripts were coded using Atlas.ti software, according to a coding
frame developed by the Trust research team through a collaborative process that used
open coding to identify new codes and so build on an existing list of codes. The coding
frame provided a common analysis framework for all of the team members involved in
coding. The inter-coder reliability score achieved by the research team was 0.74. This
score was generated by comparing the results of each researcher working on the coding
and calculating the average number of times that the same code or different codes had
been used on a selected piece of text by the researchers.
Once the transcripts had been coded, the Atlas.ti software allowed the team to identify
how each code emerged across the 101 transcripts. Some codes occurred frequently,
generating a large amount of data from the transcripts. These provided the main themes
for analysis. Other codes occurred less frequently, meaning that the number of quotes
from different transcripts was smaller. The generation of these quotes from the
transcripts complemented the team’s reading of the transcripts, enabled key themes to
be identified and described in the reporting and facilitated the selection of quotes for
reporting.
Target respondents for the survey were Cambodian men and women aged 15 – 55,
including people particularly vulnerable to the effects of climate change.
Given the small numbers of respondents from coastal and fishing communities included
in the original sample, two booster samples were carried out to obtain samples of 35
people from these groups. This was a purposive sample rather than a random sample
and although these findings are included in reporting, they are included with the
understanding that the data for the two fishing communities cannot be directly compared
to or included in analysis with the findings for the entire sample, and are not nationally
5
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
representative. As such, the figure for the entire sample is 2401 and the respondents in
the booster sample are not included in this figure. In the tables in the appendix of the
report, the data from the two booster samples are clearly indicated and are presented
separately from the data for the entire sample of 2401 respondents. (See Appendix 2 for
the complete set of data tables.)
A total of 66% of respondents come from rural areas, and there are equal proportions of
male and female respondents in the sample.
A total of 11% of people in the sample have no schooling, 41% have primary schooling,
28% have attended secondary school, 16% high school, and 4% have a university
education.
To assess the likelihood that a respondent lived below or above the poverty line,
Progress out of Poverty Index (PPI) questions were integrated into the survey
questionnaire. Using respondents’ scores, four different groups were created according
20
See Socio-demographic profile of survey sample, below, for more details on the PPI.
6
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
to the PPI: poorest (most likely to be living below the poverty line), poor, medium and
high. 21
A total of 11% of respondents are in the poorest group, 39% in the next PPI group, 40%
in the medium group, and 10% in the high PPI group.
Fishing communities make up less than 1% of the original sample. The 2 booster
samples containing members of freshwater and saltwater fishing communities are each
equivalent to just over 1% of the study population.
7
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Acquiescence Bias
Acquiescence bias refers to the tendency of respondents to behave in a compliant
manner, answering positively to questions, regardless of their content. Some questions –
for example, in which the researchers ask respondents to prioritize key issues – could
suffer more from acquiescence bias. For this reason, the questionnaire was designed to
seek unprompted, as well as prompted responses, to certain questions. Although
unprompted questions are useful in this respect, the researcher may miss some
information that is not at the front of the respondent’s mind. For this reason, many
questions were followed up by a list of prompted items.
Because qualitative research was not conducted among the public, and a quantitative
survey was not used among key informants, it was not possible to compare the views of
the public and key informants consistently.
Available Respondents
The study only includes respondents who were present in the household on the day of
the survey. It does not include those who are employed away from home (migrant
workers), nor residents of institutional residences such as those belonging to
monasteries, garment factories, high schools and universities. Nor were respondents
recruited from other institutions such as prisons, hospitals or the military. People with no
fixed address (living on streets or homeless) were also not included in the survey.
Khmer Speakers
The study was conducted in the Khmer language, so it excluded people who could not
speak Khmer.
8
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
‘booster’ sample is featured separately in data tables, rather than being incorporated into
the national sample of 2401 people.
The original proposal also requested analysis of respondents who relied on non-timber
forest products (NTFPs) for their livelihoods. Given the limited information on the
proportion of the population which relies primarily on NTFPs for their livelihoods, it was
anticipated that the cell size for this group would be insufficiently large, as was indeed
the case. It was agreed that a purposive sample of these individuals would not be
appropriate, given the operational challenges of accessing such remote rural
populations.
Validity
Unfamiliar Concepts and Terminology
Formulating questions about concepts and terminology with which respondents are not
familiar poses challenges. These challenges are, to some extent, addressed using a
qualitative approach, which can explore understanding and misconceptions in greater
detail.
Because qualitative research was not carried out among the general public, careful
attention was paid to the way in which unfamiliar concepts and terminology were
approached in the survey questionnaire. The questionnaire was developed in
consultation with the Ministry of Environment, UNDP and Oxfam. It drew on the lessons
learned from other research on the topic, where the relevant documentation was publicly
available. It also drew on lessons learnt from the Trust’s previous work in the field of
climate change.
The questionnaire was piloted and amended in response to feedback from the fieldwork
teams who carried out the pilot before the survey was carried out at scale.
Time of year
The research took place between May and June 2010, during a period in which
Cambodia experienced high temperatures and most areas of the country were suffering
the effects of drought. This could in part explain the frequent mentions of drought and
hot temperatures and the relatively infrequent mentions of flooding.
Self-Reported Data
The questionnaire asked respondents about their perceptions relevant to the topic of
climate change. Respondents were asked whether they had sufficient water for their
work and personal needs, for example. Such a subjective measurement was never
intended to replace an assessment using national or international indicators, although it
could complement an evaluation based on these. 22 Similarly, people were asked about
their experience of extreme weather events. Although these were based on the
questions asked in the national survey outlined in the Cambodia National Action Plan of
22
See http://earthtrends.wri.org/pdf_library/cp/wat_cou_116.pdf and
http://www.fao.org/nr/water/aquastat/countries/cambodia/index.stm
9
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Adaptation, 23 it should be acknowledged that popular usage of the word ‘storm’ may
differ from the scientific definition. 24
Analysis
Weighting
The total sample was designed to match the national population distribution. However, it
was not weighted.
The study used different methods to those used for the national census, 25 was
constrained by logistical and cost considerations, and gathered a smaller sample than
the national census. Practical considerations meant that occupations were also
categorised in less detail in this study than in the national census. In addition, data
relating to the proportion of people reliant on non-timber forest products (NTFPs) for their
livelihoods is not available.
For these reasons, it is not useful to attempt a consistent comparison of the socio-
demographic profile of our sample with the socio-demographic profile presented in the
national census. However, it may be useful to look at a few important aspects of the
census:
Farmers
The census finds that 71% of the population are engaged in crop and animal production,
with 63% working as subsistence farmers, fishers, hunters and gatherers.
Fishing communities
In total 1% of the census population work in fishing and aquaculture. This corresponds to
their representation in the sample in the present study.
Students
Students make up 25% of the census population, and 12% of the study population,
suggesting they are under-represented in the study sample.
Sub-group Analysis
Some sub-group analysis is limited by small cell sizes and by the application of two
different sampling approaches, as discussed above.
10
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Further analysis, such as was beyond the immediate scope of this study, would enable
these relationships to be examined in more detail. Multivariate regression analysis would
be recommended in order to control for the impact of confounding variables when
looking for causal relationships. Structural equation modelling could test the strength of
relationships between groups of variable constructs and confirm the presence, strength
and direction of causal relationships.
Lessons Learned
Given that few people are familiar with the concepts or terminology involved in this
subject, it is essential to take time to train researchers and pilot the research
instruments. The training given to all researchers involved in the study was essential to
producing rigorous results.
Conducting qualitative research among the public as well as among key informants
would have allowed for a consistent comparison of the understanding and
misconceptions among the general population and key messengers and decision-
makers.
An extended timeframe for the research, with interviews conducted in both dry and rainy
seasons, would enable the collection of data that could be used to consider the influence
of current weather conditions on any discussion of weather and climate.
Key Findings
What do Cambodians know and think about climate change?
There are different ways to know about climate change. One is to understand the
science: that human activities, such as the burning of fossil fuels for energy, are
increasing the amount of heat-trapping gases in the atmosphere, which warm the earth
and affect its climate system. Another is to experience it first hand: to witness, over a
lifetime, changes in rainfall patterns that affect the harvest; to suffer from increased
droughts, floods and other climatic disasters that can wipe out comes and crops; or to be
at the receiving end of the spread of vector-borne diseases, such as dengue and
malaria. 26
The findings of this research suggest that few Cambodians understand the scientific
basis for climate change. However, as the projected impacts of climate change become
reality, Cambodians will experience those impacts at first hand. This being the case, it
will be important to understand how Cambodians have experienced weather changes
including extreme events, how they explain them and how they think they can prepare
for and respond to them. In order to communicate climate change to the public, it will be
necessary to focus explanations on this experiential understanding of climate change,
rather than relying on scientific language that makes little sense to many Cambodians.
26
See the Cambodia NAPA: “…vector-borne diseases, in particular malaria, may become more widespread under
changing climatic conditions. With some 800 deaths per year, Cambodia already has the highest fatality rate from malaria
in Asia (CNM, 2003). The actual death toll due to malaria may be 5-10 times the officially recorded figures (RGC, 2002).”
11
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
The aim will be to eventually bring an understanding of people’s experiences together
with a more developed understanding of the scientific basis for global climate change.
Thunder 0%
Landslide 2%
Coastal storm surge 5%
No such event experienced in past year 7%
Wildfire 17%
Very cold temperatures 30%
Flood 37%
Storm, Cyclone, Tornado 37%
Drought 41%
Very high temperatures 44%
Pest on agricultural production 52%
Very heavy rain 61%
at least one event 93%
Base: All respondents N=2401 Multiple responses possible
More than half say they have experienced very heavy rain (61%) and pests which affect
agricultural production (52%). Over four in ten were affected by very high temperatures
(44%) and drought (41%), and a similar number experienced storms (37%) and flooding
(37%). Three in ten say they have experienced very cold temperatures (30%), while
around half this number experienced a wildfire in the previous year (17%). Only 7%
reported experiencing no such event.
Men and women appear to recall extreme weather events differently. Just 2% of men
say that they have not experienced an extreme weather event in the year preceding the
12
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
survey, compared to 12% of women. For each of the events detailed in Figure 1, except
for very cold temperatures, more men than women say that they have experienced it.
The data suggests that people in Phnom Penh and the Plain region suffer somewhat
less from the impacts of extreme weather, with over twice as many (12% and 10% of
residents in the respective regions) reporting no extreme weather event in the previous
year. In the Phnom Penh region, the proportions of people who experienced agricultural
pests, floods and very cold temperatures are significantly 27 smaller than all other
regions.
After respondents were asked to select the extreme weather event that they thought had
the greatest effect on their lives, they were asked a number of questions concerning the
information they received in relation to this event. More than a third (36%) had not
received any information about the extreme weather event, and of those who did, almost
three-quarters (72%) only received this information during or after the event.
Slightly more men (66%) than women (60%) received information, but there was little
difference in the timing of the information men and women received.
More urban (71%) and more young people (68%) said they had received information
about the extreme weather event.
Residents of Phnom Penh and Coastal regions reported most frequently that they
had received information on the extreme weather event (68% and 78% respectively).
More people with higher levels of education (88% of those with a university
education) and from the higher PPI groups (77% with ‘high’ on the PPI), as well as
teachers (93%), students (88%) and government officials (84%), say they received
information on the weather event.
More farmers (44%) than any other occupation did not receive any information about the
extreme weather event they experienced. More skilled manual workers (40%) and
business people (35%) than other occupations received no information.
27
Where it is stated that there is a significant difference, this is a statistically significant difference. Details can be found in
the data tables in Appendix 2.
13
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Figure 2
Information about extreme weather event 21% During
the event
1% DK/NS
3% DK/NS
Base: Experienced at least 1 extreme weather event. N=2242 Base : Received information on event. N=1417
Of all those who reported experiencing an extreme weather event in the past year and
receiving information, half (51%) received information about the event only after it had
happened. There are few variations among different subgroups, with the exception of
Tonle Sap, where more people (57%) said that they received information after the event,
and there were comparatively fewer people (20%) who reported receiving information
before the event.
More people from Phnom Penh (36%) and the Plain (31%) region say they received
information before the extreme weather event took place.
People most frequently mention television (59%), radio (52%) and word of mouth from
neighbours (37%) as sources of information on the extreme weather event.
Higher proportions of men (62%), urban residents (75%), residents of the Phnom Penh
and Plain regions (83% and 67% respectively) and those with higher education levels
(86% of those with university education vs. 35% with no schooling) and from the higher
PPI groups (79% from the ‘highest’ group vs. 31% from the ‘poorest’) mention television
as a source.
Radio was a source of information on extreme weather events for significantly larger
proportions of men (58%), rural people (54%), and farmers (55%) within their subgroups.
One in ten people say that they received information about the event through personal
observation, with significantly larger proportions of men (13%), rural residents (11%),
and people from the Tonle Sap (16%), Coastal (14%) and Mountain (12%) regions
saying that they found out this way. A high proportion of respondents from the fishing
communities say the same. 28
28
It should be noted that the ‘booster’ sample for coastal fishing communities cannot be considered nationally
representative, as the respondents were purposively sampled. Due to the different methods used, we cannot compare this
sample statistically to the total sample of 2401, nor to the results for different subgroups. As such, we will not include
statistical results for the ‘booster’ samples in the body of this report. These results can be found in the full data tables
contained in Appendix 2.
14
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Morre rural residents say they
t receive
ed informatiion through
h neighbourss (43%) and family
memmbers (15% %), particula
arly outside of the Phno
om Penh an nd Plain reg
gions. More
e people
with
h lower educational levvels (49% with
w no scho ooling) and
d from lower PPI groupps (47%
from
m the ‘poorrest’ PPI grroup) say thhey were g given inform
mation by a neighbourr, as do
farm
mers (41%) and busine ess people (42%).
(
Whiile few resp pondents (8 8%) mentio on “authorities” (commune counciil representtative or
villa
age chief) as
a a source of informattion on thesse events, significantlyy more ruraal (10%)
peo ople, residents of the Mountain (14%) region, and the least educated (16 6%) and
poo orest (17% of those fro om the ‘poo orest’ PPI group)
g say they receivved informa
ation on
thesse events frrom their village or com
mmune chie ef.
Figure 3
w informa
How ation helpe
ed people to preparre for extre
eme weather
Whe en asked how inform mation hellped them prepare for f the we eather event they
29
menntioned, ma any say that it helped d them to prepare materials
m (52%), and d that it
help
ped them too support onne another as they preepared for th he event (46%). Aroun nd a fifth
of respondentss said the information they receivved meant they bough ht pesticide
e (21%);
movved to a pla
ace of safetyy (20%); or prepared sufficient foo
od (20%).
29
Thiis refers to something that coulld help to facilita
ate a response to
t an extreme weather
w event, ssuch as a boat, generator
or wo
ood for construcction, etc.
15
5
Undeerstanding Pub
blic Perceptionss of Climate Cha
ange in Cambo
odia
Figure 4
hanges in the we
Ch eather
Keey Insights
Caambodians say that thheir weatheer and envvironment iss changing. They thinnk that
tem
mperatures have incre
eased, and some say that the patterns of tthe rains and the
seasons are not as theyy used to be.
b People sseem to ha ave started noticing so
ome of
the
ese changes more receently than others.
o
Figure 5
16
6
Undeerstanding Pub
blic Perceptionss of Climate Cha
ange in Cambo
odia
Figure 6
Mosst of those who think that the se easons are harder to predict, tha at temperature has
incrreased, thatt drought ha
as become more frequ uent, that th
here is less rain and th
hat rains
are less intensse and lesss predictable
e, say theyy have obse erved thesee changes over
o the
past year.
30
It should
s be noted that the ‘boosteer’ sample for cooastal fishing co
ommunities can nnot be considerred nationally
repre esentative, as th
he respondents were purposive ely sampled. (Se ee Methodologyy, p5.) Due to the different meth hods used,
we ca annot compare this sample statistically to the total
t sample of 2401,
2 nor to thee results for diffe
erent subgroupss. As such,
we will
w not include sttatistical results for the ‘boosterr’ samples in the
e body of this re
eport. These ressults can be fouund in the
full daata tables conta
ained in Append dix 2.
17
7
Undeerstanding Pub
blic Perceptionss of Climate Cha
ange in Cambo
odia
Changes in the environment
Cambodians have noticed changes in the environment as well as in the weather. The
change in environment that is mentioned most frequently by the public and by key
informants is deforestation.
Deforestation concerns many Cambodians, who also consider the forest the country’s
greatest environmental asset. When asked to choose the most important natural
resources in Cambodia, half of people say trees or forest are the most important
resource, and three quarters of people include trees and forest among their three most
important natural resources.
Given the value that people place on trees, many people are concerned by the loss of
forest. Indeed, most Cambodians see deforestation as one of the country’s highest
priority issues.
Figure 7
Please tell me, for each item on the list, whether for Cambodia it should be a
high priority, a priority, or not a priority at all?
High Priority
100%
93%
87% 85%
80%
60%
40%
20%
0%
Health Deforestation Drought
Base: All respondents N=2401 Multiple responses possible
Key Insights
Most Cambodians’ understanding of climate change terminology, causes and effects
is low. Many recognise the terms ‘climate change’ and ‘global warming’. However,
this recognition does not indicate understanding of climate change as a global
phenomenon.
18
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Climate change terminology
Almost 90% of people recognise at least one of the terms ‘climate change’ and ‘global
warming’. More than eight in ten (84%) recognise ‘climate change’, while seven in ten
(70%) say they recognise ‘global warming’. Of those who recognise both terms,
however, most (73%) say they are more familiar with the term ‘climate change’.
88% of men, 91% of urban respondents, 87% of those aged 15-24, 99% of those with a
university education and 93% from the ‘high’ PPI group have heard of ‘climate change’.
19
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Thee responden nts were assked to pro ovide more detail abou ut the term that they had
h said
wass the most familiar
f hem. The charts below
to th w illustrate the most freequently meentioned
term
ms and indiccate the sim
milarities in most
m people
e’s understa anding of th
he terminolo
ogy.
Figure 8
Peoople appearr to understtand both ‘climate cha ange’ and ‘global warm ming’ in rellation to
their impacts, rather thann their causes. Most respondents associatte both term ms with
dise
ease, an inncrease in temperature
t e and local deforestation. More than half mention
m
loca
al deforestation, and on
nly a sixth, industrializa
i ation, in con
nnection witth both term
ms.
Sou
urces of informati
i ion on cliimate cha
ange term
minology
Mosst people ha ave heard about
a clima
ate change through bro
oadcast me
edia (62% frrom TV,
58%% from radio ollowed by word of mo
o). This is fo outh; 50% of
o respondents have heeard the
term
m ‘climate cchange’ from m their neig
ghbours and
d another 18%
1 said th
hey heard the
t term
from
m friends or colleaguess.
20
0
Undeerstanding Pub
blic Perceptionss of Climate Cha
ange in Cambo
odia
Figure 9
Sign
nificantly more
m womenn (54%) thaan men (46 6%) and more
m rural C
Cambodians s (53%)
than
n urban (44 4%) have heard
h the te
erm ‘climate
e change’ or
o ‘global wwarming’ fro
om their
neig
ghbours.
Of those
t respo
ondents froom poorer background
b ds (53% fro om the ‘poo or’ PPI grou
up) and
with
h lower leveels of educa
ation (57% with
w no sch hooling), sig
gnificantly m
more say the
ey have
heaard the terms from theirr neighbourss than the rest
r of the sample.
s
Veryy few peop ple say the ey have he eard the terms from authorities
a (commune council
reprresentativess and village
e chiefs) off any kind.
Few
w people saay they heard the term
ms at schooll, but manyy more 15-2
24 year-oldss (23%),
and those with
h high school education (23%), ha
ave heard the
t terms a at school. This may
21
Undeerstanding Pub
blic Perceptionss of Climate Cha
ange in Cambo
odia
reflect the introduction of climate science into the Earth Sciences curriculum at some
levels of secondary school education.
Key Insights
While only a small percentage of Cambodians spontaneously mention human activities as a
cause of changing weather patterns, when asked directly, a third agree that their personal
activities contribute. The majority of respondents blame deforestation for changes in the
weather. A significant but much lower percentage blame pollution from industry, cars and
fossil fuels generally.
When asked unprompted what they think has caused the weather patterns to change in
Cambodia, two thirds (67%) of respondents think that deforestation in Cambodia causes
the weather patterns to change, while just 3% mention deforestation outside the
country’s borders. Just 18% of respondents mention industrial pollution as a cause.
29% say that they don’t know what causes the changing weather patterns, while just
11% mention driving cars and motor vehicles.
Figure 10
What do you think causes the weather patterns to change in
Cambodia? (Unprompted)
Deforestation in Cambodia 67%
Pollution by industry 18%
Driving cars and other vehicles 11%
Using fossil fuels 7%
Nature 7%
Fertilizer use 5%
Human activities 4%
Hole in the ozone layer 4%
Waste 4%
Forest fires 3%
Burning wood 3%
Deforestation/Tree-cutting in other countries 3%
Using Air Conditioners 2%
Greenhouse gas emissions 2%
Burning rubbish 2%
Don't know 29%
0% 20% 40% 60% 80%
After respondents had provided the unprompted answers presented in Figure 10, they
were then prompted from a list. The list contained both correct and incorrect causes of
global climate change. (The content of the list was informed by previous Trust qualitative
research on climate change.) 31 Respondents were asked to respond yes, no, or don’t
know. The ‘don’t know’ responses are presented in the graph below.
31
Africa Talks Climate, 2009. See www.africatalksclimate.com
22
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
The data indicates that respondents are uncertain of some of the correct causes of
climate change: 65% of people say they do not know or are not sure whether
greenhouse gas emissions are a cause of the changing weather, and 23% say the same
about the use of fossil fuels. (The correct answer to these items is ‘yes’.) 52% of people
are not sure whether the depletion of the ozone layer has an impact on the weather. The
idea that ozone depletion is connected to global climate change is an important
misconception that has been identified by research in the UK and Africa. 32 (The correct
answer to this item is ‘no’.)
Figure 11
Do the following cause weather patterns in Cambodia to change? (Prompted)
Don't know / Not sure
100%
80%
65%
60% 52%
40%
23% 23%
18% 15% 14%
20% 13% 12% 12% 12% 11% 11% 9% 9% 8% 6% 4%
0%
When asked directly, one third (33%) of people say that their own individual actions
contribute to climate change.
Greater proportions of men (42%), urban residents (40%), those with higher
education levels (82% with a university education), and those from the higher PPI
groups (48% from the ‘high’ PPI group), say that their own actions contribute to
climate change.
There is also an association with age, with more 39% of the youngest
respondents (those aged 15-24) saying that their individual actions contribute to
climate change.
63% of teachers, 66% of students, 43% of professional-technical-management
employees and 52% of government officials say that their actions contribute to
the problem.
32
Ibid. See also Measuring Awareness of Climate Change, Report on Stage 1 of ESPACE project Adapting to Climate
Change: Raising Community Awareness in West Sussex, West Sussex County Council, UK, 2005
23
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Greaterr proportion
ns of wome en (62%), rrural responndents (58%%), those with
w the
lowest levels of ed
ducation (62 2% with no
o schooling)) and in thee lower PPI groups
(59% frrom the ‘po oorest’ andd 59% from m the ‘poorr’ PPI grou ups) say th
hat their
actions do not conntribute to climate
c chan
nge, or sayy that they d
do not know
w if they
contribu
ute.
Greaterr proportion
ns of farmers (59%) sa
ay their acttions do no
ot contribute
e to the
problem
m, or say the
ey do not kn
now whetheer they conttribute.
A signifficant numb
ber of houssewives (67 7%) and a substantial number off people
from co
oastal fishin
ng commun nities (71%) say they do not co ontribute to climate
change through theeir individua
al actions.
Thoose who think that theeir actions do
d contributte to climatte change ssuggest tha
at using
macchines (44%%), cutting wood
w for co
ooking (40%
%), burningg waste (37%), cooking g (27%)
and using che emicals (166%) are wa ays in which they con ntribute to cclimate cha
ange as
indivviduals.
Figure 12
Usiing machines
Morre men (53% %), more urban
u respo
ondents (58%), more of o those with higher ed ducation
leveels (77% with university educatio
on) and from
m the highe er PPI grou ups (69% from the
‘high’ PPI grouup) and morre farmers (54%)
( say that
t they co
ontribute to climate cha
ange by
usinng machines. Very high proportionns (80%) off residents of Phnom P Penh say thhat they
contribute to climate change by using
g machines.
Cuttting wood
d for cook
king
Morre men (45% %), more ru
ural responddents (52%), more of those
t from Coastal (655%) and
Mouuntain regio
ons (52%), and more of o those wiith lower ed
ducation levvels (56% of
o those
with
h no schoo oling) and from
f lower PPI groupps (70% frrom the ‘po oorest’ PPI group)
menntion cutting wood fo or cooking. Significantly larger proportionss of non-unniversity
stud
dents say th
he same.
24
4
Undeerstanding Pub
blic Perceptionss of Climate Cha
ange in Cambo
odia
Burrning rubb
bish
Theere is no sig
gnificant diffferent betw
ween men and women,, nor between rural and urban
grouups in theiir mentionss of burnin ng waste a as an indivvidual contrribution to climate
change. Signifficantly larg
ger proportio ons of peo he Phnom Penh (45%
ople from th %), Plain
(45%%) and Ton nle Sap (40% %) regions mention bu urning waste
e, as do mo ore of the yo
oungest
resp
pondents (4 44% of thosse aged 15 5-24) those
e with secondary (40% %) and high h school
education (49% %), and thosse from the e second higghest PPI group
g (scorring between 50-74
nts).
poin
Coo
oking
Morre of those from the Phnom Penh h (45%) and
d Tonle Sap (33%) reg
gions mention this,
as do
d those ag 29%) and 35-44 (38%).
ged 25-34 (2
Usiing chemicals
Morre men (19%%), more ruural respond dents (20%)) and more of those fro
om the Plain
n region
(26%%), when compared
c to
o their relattive subgrou
ups say tha
at using che
emicals is one
o way
in which
w they have
h contrib
buted to climmate change e.
Understand
ding the im
mpacts of
o climate change
Keey Insights
Almmost all of th
hose respond dents who ha ave heard of the term ‘climate change e’ (98%) alsoo say
thaat they think Cambodia iss currently afffected by climate change e. Human heealth and
aggriculture are perceived to o be worst afffected. A substantial nummber of Cam
mbodians (22%) say
thaat they do noot know whetther Cambod dia will feel th
he impacts of
o climate cha
ange in the fu
uture,
suggesting tha at people are uncertain whether
w the changes theyy have experiienced in the
eir
evveryday lives will affect th
hem in the lonng term.
Of those
t peop
ple who had d heard the
e term ‘clim
mate chang
ge’, almost all (98%) say
s that
clim
mate change
e is affectin
ng their couuntry now. Most
M (75%)) say that climate
c change will
affe
ect Cambodia in the futture.
Figure 13
25
5
Undeerstanding Pub
blic Perceptionss of Climate Cha
ange in Cambo
odia
A substantial
s number off Cambodians (22%)) say that they do n not know whether
w
Cam
mbodia will feel the im
mpacts of climate
c chan
nge in the future, sug
ggesting tha
at some
peo
ople do no ot understand the terrm ‘climatee change’ as referrinng to a long-term
phe
enomenon.
Sign
nificantly more
m rural people
p (25%
%) than urb ban people
e (17%) sayy that they
y do not
know whether Cambodia
C will
w be affeccted in the future.
f
eater propo
Gre ortions of people
p with
h the lowe
est levels of education (29% with w no
scho
ooling) sayy that they do not kno affected by climate
ow whetherr the countrry will be a
change in the ffuture.
Thoose respondents who o had hearrd the term m climate change an nd say the
ey think
Cammbodia is o
or will be afffected by climate
c change were also
a asked what impac
cts they
thou
ught the cha
anging weaather would have.
Figure 14
hat are /will be the effects of 'climate change' in Cambodia? (Unprompted))
Wh
Health 59%
Haarder to farm 47%
Drought 36%
Increasing temperature 35%
Decreasing agricultu
ural products 28%
Watter shortages 24%
Less money 14%
Harrder to travel 14%
Increasing natu
ural disasters 13%
Poverty 13%
Irre
egular rainfall 11%
Damage to wildlife 10%
Fore
est shortages 8%
Damagge to housing 8%
Increaased flooding 6%
Sickness and deaths of animals 5%
Other 1%
Base
e: Heard the term clim
mate change and th
hink it affects Cambo
odia now or in the future. N= 1505
Multiple responses possible
Humman health and agricculture are understood d to receivve the worrst impacts
s of the
changing weatther. Most people
p (59%
%) mention the impactt of climate change onn health,
h substantia
with al numbers saying farm ming is moore difficult (47%) and others mentioning
drouught (36%)) and increasing temp peratures (3
35%). Arou und a quartter (28%) mention
m
deccreases in agricultural yields
y and water
w shorta
ages (24%).
Co
oncerns about th
he chan
nging we
eather an
nd envirronmentt
It iss helpful to understand
d the ways in which ppeople’s understandingg of their chhanging
wea ather and of hange’ and ‘global wa
o the termss ‘climate ch arming’ is rrelated to th
heir key
concerns.
Resspondents were
w read ittems from a list, and fo or each item
m, they werre asked wh hether it
wass a high prio
ority, a priorrity, or not a priority forr Cambodia a. In response to this question,
26
6
Undeerstanding Pub
blic Perceptionss of Climate Cha
ange in Cambo
odia
thre
ee-quarters of people responded
r t
that climate
e change an nd global w
warming are e priority
issu
ues for Cammbodia. Thiss is in keeping with othher research h that has b
been condu ucted on
the topic.33 How
wever, therre are many other con ncerns com mpeting for people’s atttention,
and with 93% o of people co ority issue, health curre
onsidering it a high prio ently tops th
he list of
peoople’s conce
erns for the country.
Figure 15
elation to o
In re other enviroonmental isssues, ‘climaate change’ and ‘globa al warming’ do not
top the list, aalthough they are am mong the to op ten gen neral prioritties mentio oned by
resppondents. DDeforestatioon and drouught are higgher up the list of priorrities, by aro
ound 10
perccentage po oints. Global warming g comes slightly
s high
her than cclimate cha ange; a
possible explan nation is tha
at people understand
u tthe Khmer term 34 to re efer to an in
ncrease
in th
he tempera s connect it to drought. Less su
ature of the soil, and so urprising, given the
findings detaileed above, is that de eforestation is seen asa the bigg gest environ nmental
probblem.
Fam
mily life, work and
d agricultture
In the context of family liife, work an nd agricultu ure, people
e say that the changes
s in the
weaather bring d
diseases, make
m it difficcult to cultiva
ate and harrder to workk.
Greaterr proportion ns of men are conce erned that changes in n weather make it
harder to work (4 48%), to cu ultivate (54%) and to travel (39% %), and more
m are
concern ned by the increased
i e
expense asssociated with the chan
nges in the weather
w
in relation to electrricity and wa
ater bills (14
4%).
Significantly greate er proportioons of women (17%) are a concern ned about a lack of
water, aabout heavyy rain (4%) and about weather ch hanges makking it moree difficult
to sleepp (39%).
33
See Perceptions and
a coverage off climate change e: what do we already
a know?, p 1
34
Kar Leung Kamda ao Phen Dey; se
ee Translating climate
c change, p 19
27
7
Undeerstanding Pub
blic Perceptionss of Climate Cha
ange in Cambo
odia
In rural areas, greater proportions of people are worried about weather changes
making it harder to cultivate (62%), reducing agricultural yields (40%), and
causing water shortages (15%).
In Phnom Penh, more people than in other regions are concerned that weather
changes lead to more difficult travel (57%), increased expenses (34%), and
difficulty sleeping (7%).
More people from the older age groups are worried about changes in weather
causing disease (68% of those aged 45-55).
More of those from younger age groups say that weather changes make it more
difficult to work (49% of those aged 15-24) and bring heavy rain (4%).
People from lower PPI groups and with lower education levels are concerned
about the impact of weather changes on cultivation (70% from the ‘poorest’ PPI
group and 65% with no schooling) and agricultural yields (44% from the ‘poorest’
PPI group and 42% with no schooling).
Greater proportions of people with primary education (16%) and from the second
and third PPI groups (29% of those with a PPI score between 25 and 74) mention
a lack of water as one of their concerns.
Meanwhile, those with a university education are more worried about weather
changes bringing disease (77%) and making it more difficult to work (58%).
Those with higher levels of education and from higher PPI groups are more
concerned about weather changes making it difficult to travel (47% of those with
a university education and 45% of those from the ‘high’ PPI group), and
increasing expenditure on commodities such as electricity and water (30% of
those with a university education and 31% of those from the ‘high’ PPI group).
More farmers than any other group are worried weather changes will cause
difficulties for cultivation (72%) and reduce yields (48%). More government
officials than average are concerned about a reduction in yield. More skilled
manual workers are concerned that changes in the weather will make it difficult to
work (65%).
28
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Figure 16
29
9
Undeerstanding Pub
blic Perceptionss of Climate Cha
ange in Cambo
odia
Water resources and climate change
Water access and quality
Respondents were asked whether they think access to and quality of water is improving
in the area in which they live. Almost half think access is improving (47%) and a similar
number (45%) think water quality is improving. 35,36
However, there are statistically significant differences across different groups. A greater
proportion of men (26%) think that access to water is getting worse. Women’s
perceptions of water quality are more positive, with more women saying quality is
improving (48%).
More urban respondents think access to and quality of water is improving (65% and 57%
for access and quality respectively) and the same goes for respondents from the Phnom
Penh (69% and 65%) and Plain (56% and 52%) regions. The picture is more divided
among rural respondents. In relation to access to water, opinion is split fairly equally
between the three possible responses. As for water quality, on the other hand, more
rural respondents (30%) think it is getting worse.
Higher proportions of those with the lowest education levels (38% of those with no
schooling) and from the lower PPI groups (37% of those with a PPI of 0-24) think that
access to water is getting worse. In terms of access to water, more respondents with
mid-range PPI scores (between 25 and 74) say it is getting neither better nor worse
(62%).
More farmers say that both access to and quality of water is getting worse (35% and
31%). High proportions of respondents from coastal fishing communities say that access
is getting worse, while a high proportion of respondents from freshwater fishing
communities say that water quality is getting worse.37
Most people (79%) say that they have enough water for their personal use. 38 More
urban respondents (89%), more of those from the youngest age group (83% of those
aged 15-24) and more of those with higher education levels (94% of those with a
university education) and higher PPI scores (94% of those with a PPI between 75 and
100) say they have enough water for their personal use.
35
This study did not set out to measure water access or quality, but rather to explore people’s perceptions of water access
and quality in the area in which they lived.
36
The Royal Government of Cambodia’s 1998 census estimated that 29% of the population had access to improved
sources of water. National Census of Cambodia, Royal Government of Cambodia, Ministry of Planning, National Institute
of Statistics, 1998. In 2006 the UN estimated that this figure had increased to 65% of the population using improved
sources of water. World Population Prospects, the 2006 Revision, UN Population Division.
37
It should be noted that the ‘booster’ sample for coastal fishing communities cannot be considered nationally
representative, as the respondents were purposively sampled. Due to the different methods used, we cannot compare this
sample statistically to the total sample of 2401, nor to the results for different subgroups. As such, we will not include
statistical results for the ‘booster’ samples in the body of this report. These results can be found in the full data tables
contained in Appendix 2.
38
For the purposes of this study, we defined ‘water for personal use’ as water for drinking, cooking and washing.
30
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Importantly, there is not a difference between the responses of men and women in
relation to the amount of water they have for their personal use. This finding does not
reflect the views of some key informants interviewed for the qualitative research,39 who
are concerned that women will feel the impacts of a lack of water more sharply than
men.
By contrast, higher proportions of people from Tonle Sap (24%) and Coastal (37%)
regions, and more farmers, say they do not have enough water for their personal use. A
substantial proportion of people from coastal fishing communities report that they do not
have enough water for their personal use.
While the majority of people say they have enough water for their personal use, 67% say
they lack the water they need to do their work. Higher proportions of respondents from
Plain (75%), Coastal (65%) and Mountain (75%) regions say they do not have sufficient
water for their work. More farmers (80%) say they lack water for their work, and a
substantial number from coastal fishing communities say the same.
Given that health is seen by respondents as the highest priority for the country, it is
important to understand the ways in which people connect climate change and health.
(These connections will be explored further in the section ‘What do key informants in
Cambodia know and understand about climate change?’).
39
See ‘What do key informants in Cambodia know and understand about climate change?’, p48
40
See Indochina, iTrak, The Heat is On
41
See Geres 2009. In general, people agreed that incidence of disease among humans and animals had increased. For
humans, diseases such as flu, fever, coughs, stomach aches and intestinal illnesses, respiratory ailments, dengue fever
and malaria were primarily discussed. The increases in disease were widely attributed to increased temperatures, rapid
changes in temperature, water shortages, chemicals in food and poor sanitation, and in some places, the need for people
to go and work in the forest. People in 2 of 4 provinces reported increased difficulty in treating diseases. In Prey Veng,
there were reports that the supply of traditional medicines has declined.
31
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Figure 17
22%% of respon
ndents say that
t malaria
a is a healtth change brought
b on by the climmate and
18%% say the sa
ame for denngue. Malarria and den
ngue sit in th of this table despite
he middle o
bein
ng the two health chaanges the science
s com
mmunity wo e directly linked to
ould say are
clim
mate changee. Disease
Re
esponding and ad
dapting to
t climate
e change
e
Key y Insights
Moore than a quarter of Cambodian ns say theyy do not kn now how to o respond to the
chaanging wea ather, and a significan nt number say there is nothing g they can do to
resspond. Althoough the majority
m sayys that theyy and theirr communities have already
a
beggun to respoond, more than
t half sa
ay they do not
n have the e information they needd to do
so. The young gest people
e (15-24) arre significan
ntly more poositive than
n other grou
ups on
eveery measurre of individual and community
c capacity to
o respond to the cha anging
wea ather.
How do Cam
mbodians
s think they can re
espond?
Resspondents were
w asked unprompte ed how theyy think theyy can respond to the ch hanging
wea e can plant trees (21%
ather. Substtantial proportions say that people %) and develop new
agricultural tecchniques (114%). The next mostt frequent responses concern ways w of
keeping cool, such
s as getting air conditioning (15%)
( or baathing and using a fan n (14%).
Other response es centre on
o water ma anagement, with peoplle mentionin ng irrigation
n canals
(12%%), water control stru uctures (111%) buildinng dykes (8 8%) and rrehabilitatingg water
storrage structu
ures (6%). Of
O most con ncern, perhaaps, are thee responsess ‘do nothin
ng’ (8%)
and ‘plant as usual’ (6%).
32
2
Undeerstanding Pub
blic Perceptionss of Climate Cha
ange in Cambo
odia
Figure 18
Treee planting is suggested as a ressponse by relatively hiigher numb bers of men n (29%),
w as higher proporttions of Phnom Penh (26%) and
as well d Tonle Sap p (31%) residents.
High
her proportiions of resp
pondents froom the youngest age group
g (26%% of those aged
a 15-
24) and from tthe higher education
e (
(51% of tho
ose with a university
u e
education) and
a PPI
ups (29% of those with
grou h a PPI of 75-100) say that peoplee can plant trees to resspond to
the changing weather.
w Perhaps unsurprisingly, given
g the hig
gher numbe ers of the yooungest
resp
pondents who
w mentioon tree plaanting, morre universitty (46%) a and non-un niversity
stud
dents (40%%) suggest this course e of action.. Higher prroportions oof teacherss (46%),
government offficials (38%
%) and thosee in professional, techn
nical and maanagement sectors
(30%
%) also propose tree planting
p as a response..
33
3
Undeerstanding Pub
blic Perceptionss of Climate Cha
ange in Cambo
odia
A number of different approaches to water management were mentioned by
respondents, and the profile of respondents for each approach differs. Higher
proportions of men (14%), residents of Tonle Sap (15%) and respondents with higher
education levels (20% of those with a university education) say that people can develop
irrigation canals. Meanwhile, residents of the Plain region (19%) say that people can
work on water control structures. More of those from rural areas (9%) and from
regions other than Phnom Penh (9% from Plain, 8% from Tonle Sap and Coastal and
10% from Mountain) say that people could build dykes. Meanwhile, more men (8%) and
respondents from the Coastal region (10%), and higher proportions of people with
university education (14%) and from the highest PPI group (10% from the highest PPI
group) say that people should rehabilitate water storage structures.
Two suggestions, the first that people can ‘do nothing’ to respond to the changing
weather, and the second, that they could plant as usual, are causes for concern. Higher
proportions of people from Phnom Penh (18%) and Plain (15%) regions and skilled
manual workers (17%) say that people can do nothing to respond to the changing
weather. Meanwhile, the group of respondents suggesting that people plant as usual
contains higher proportions of women (8%), of rural people (7%) and Mountain residents
(24%), than the sample as a whole. It also includes relatively higher numbers of working
youth (10%) and those from the youngest age group (8% of those aged15-24), and of
those with the lowest education levels (14% with no schooling) and from the lower PPI
groups (14% of those from the ‘poorest’ PPI group).
In urban areas, a higher proportion of people (76%) than in rural areas (71%) say they or
a family member has already done something to respond to the changing weather. In
rural areas, by contrast, more people (57%) say that they have seen responses within
their communities than in urban areas, where 52% have seen responses within their
communities.
In Mountain areas, more people than in other regions say that they have seen family
members (78%) and their community (66%) taking action. More people in the Plain and
Coastal regions say they have seen action in their communities. In Tonle Sap, however,
a smaller proportion of people than in other regions say that they have seen their family
or their community take action (68% and 44% respectively, compared to 73% and 55%
for the total sample). A lower proportion of people from Phnom Penh region say they
have seen people in their community respond to the changing weather (43%).
Among those with lower levels of education (37% with no schooling) and the lower PPI
groups (31% from the ‘poorest’ PPI group), more people say that they have not seen
34
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
anyone in their family take action to respond to the changing weather. There are no
significant differences associated with education level or PPI group in responses at the
community level, however.
35
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Figure 19
How people
e would re
espond to
o the imp
pact on th
heir work
Mosst people in
n Cambodia a say their work
w has be
een affecte
ed by chang ges in the weather.
w
Onee fourth (26
6%) say they do not kn now what thhey would do
d if weathe er changes were to
get worse. This is the ressponse men ntioned moost frequently by particcipants. Oth
hers say
theyy would plan
nt trees (19
9%).
Figu
ure 20
Domestic
c
Agriculturre
Water
Natural
Resourcees
Other
36
6
Undeerstanding Pub
blic Perceptionss of Climate Cha
ange in Cambo
odia
Levels of self-efficacy and collective efficacy in responding to climate
change
Respondents were asked whether they agreed or disagreed to a series of statements
designed to assess levels of collective and self-efficacy in responding to climate change.
From their responses, we can see that most people doubt their individual abilities, and
the abilities of their communities, to respond to the changing weather.
When prompted, almost 9 in 10 people (89%) do not think that the changing weather
brings any benefit to them or their family, and more than half think they are unable to
respond to the changing weather (59%) and they cannot find the information they need
to respond (52%). More women, rural Cambodians, poorer people and those with the
least education say they lack the information they need to respond. 42 People’s
perceptions of their communities’ abilities to respond are somewhat less negative, but
still present a worrying picture. Less than a third (31%) of people think that their
communities can respond to the changing weather, with only 28% saying that their
communities have the resources to do so. Just a quarter of people (25%) think that their
communities are able to respond to drought and floods, while most say that their
communities are unable to do so.
More urban respondents say they can find the information they need and think their
communities have the resources they need to respond. The same is true of respondents
from the Tonle Sap and Mountain regions.
More respondents from the Mountain region think that their communities can respond to
droughts and floods, and that their community is able to respond to changes in the
weather more generally.
More of those from higher PPI groups and with higher education levels think they can
find the information they need to respond. The same is true of government officials.
42
See table 54 in appendix 2.
37
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Who is responding to climate change?
Knowledge of individual and organizational responses
Almost no-one knows of any organized response to the changing weather (93% of all
respondents). The near total lack of awareness of any individual or organization working
to respond to the problem suggests people are unaware of existing national and local
programmes to respond to climate change and are currently making decisions about
responses without receiving support from any source outside of their immediate
communities.
Responsibility
Responsibility for the climate change response is ascribed to government (35% of all
respondents), the Prime Minister (29% of all respondents), and NGOs (25% of all
respondents). Less frequently mentioned, but still receiving more than 10% of mentions,
are village chiefs and other local leaders (16% of all respondents), and the Cambodian
people (14% of all respondents).
The role of the village chief or local leader is mentioned by more rural residents (18%)
and people from Mountain areas (29%), and by more of those with the lowest levels of
education (26% of those with no schooling) and from the lowest PPI groups (27% of
those with a PPI of 0-24).
Sources of information
The most common sources of information are broadcast media and word-of-mouth
through friends and neighbours. Of these three most commonly mentioned sources,
broadcast media are trusted more highly than friends and neighbours.
38
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Figures 21
1a and 21b
Frie
ends and neeighbours are
a a sourcce of inform
mation for more
m of the younger pe
eople in
the sample (67
7% of those aged 15-24
4) and moree rural peop
ple (65%).
Newwspapers and
a magazines are rea ad by greater proportiions of you
unger respo ondents;
% of those aged 15-2
16% 24 get inforrmation fromm newspap pers and 144% of thos se aged
15-2
24 get it fro
om magazines. Greate er proportio
ons of bette
er-educated
d responden nts also
obta
ain informaation from print media a, with 59%% of those e with a unniversity ed
ducation
read
ding newsp papers and 40% of tho ose with a university education
e re
eading mag gazines.
Morre urban thaan rural ressidents read
d print meddia, with 22 e from urban areas
2% of those
read
ding newspapers and 14% 1 reading magazine es.
Tru
usted info
ormation sources
Thee most highlly trusted so
ources of in
nformation are
a TV, authorities, inte
ernet and ra
adio. Of
thesse, TV and radio are th
he most com mmonly useed sources of
o informatioon.
Newwspapers ddo not commpare well to broadcaast media. Magazines are least trusted.
Theese sourcess are most frequently used by residents off Phnom Penh, and by
b more
high
hly educated
d and urban
n residents..
In te
erms of botth use and trust,
t broad dcast media
a (TV and ra
adio) and authorities
a c
compare
favoourably with
h other sourrces of inforrmation.
39
9
Undeerstanding Pub
blic Perceptionss of Climate Cha
ange in Cambo
odia
Me
edia con
nsumptio
on
Morre than 8 in 10 Camboodians are media
m umers.43 Am
consu mong mediaa consumerrs, more
peo
ople watch TV
T than liste
en to radio, and 17% of
o people coonsume neitther radio nor TV.
Figure 22
Alm
most everyon
ne (91%) haas access to
o a mobile phone, with n half (60%) owning
h more than
their own mobile phone.
Figure 2
43
Forr the purposes ofo this study, ‘m
media consumer’’ is defined as someone
s who ha
as watched or listened to either TV or
radio, or both, at leasst once in the month
m preceding
g the survey.
40
0
Undeerstanding Pub
blic Perceptionss of Climate Cha
ange in Cambo
odia
Me
edia com
mbinatio
ons
Figure 24
o-fifths of people
Two p (41%
%) consumee both radioo and TV. Around a q quarter (26%) only
watcch TV, while a sixth of
o people (1
16%) only liisten to the
e radio. Verry few peop
ple (6%)
have ever usedd the interne
et.
Rad
dio habits
ts
57%
% of people are radio liisteners. Within
W this grroup, there are higher proportions s of men
(66%%) and of responden nts from thee youngestt age grou up (65% off 15-24 yea ar-olds).
Peoople living in Coastal and Moun ntain regions (both 50%)
5 are ssignificantly under-
reprresented in
n the radio o listener group.
g More e radio listteners havee higher le evels of
education, with
h 62% of se econdary-edducated, 71 1% of high--school eduucated, and 75% of
univ
versity-educcated people listening to
t radio. Thhose with a PPI score o of 50 to 74 are
a also
over-representted in this group.
41
Undeerstanding Pub
blic Perceptionss of Climate Cha
ange in Cambo
odia
More urban listeners (25%) listen to educational programmes, and more women (23%)
listen to health programmes.
Radio stations
The top 4 radio stations among Cambodian audiences are:
Radio Bayon (all channels) 28%
Municipal Radio 103 FM (Phnom Penh) 20%
WMC Radio 102 FM (Phnom Penh), Svey Rieng (94.5 FM), Kompong Thom
(102.2 FM) 13%
Sambok Khmum Radio 105 FM (Phnom Penh) 10%
It is important to note that 18% of people cannot remember the name of the station(s)
they listen to.
More men and more urban residents listen on a Saturday and Sunday. Proportionally
more older people (45-55) listen to the radio every day.
The most popular listening time is between 6am and 8am, when more than half (53%)
tune in. Substantial numbers listen throughout the evening, concentrated between 6pm
and 8pm (37%) and tailing off between 8pm and 10pm (27%). The 12 to 2pm lunchtime
slot is also popular, with 29% of listeners tuning in at this time.
Significantly fewer women than men tune in to the two popular evening slots. (43% and
31% of men tune in between 6pm and 8pm and 8pm and 10pm, respectively, compared
to 29% and 21% of women.)
More urban listeners (57%) than rural listeners tune in to the early 6am to 8am slot,
whereas more rural (32%) than urban tune in to the lunchtime 12 to 2pm slot.
Younger people tune in slightly later (19% tune in between 8am and 10am), and more of
them listen between midday and 2pm (34%) and 2pm and 4pm (15%) than any other
group.
Most listeners tune in once (48%) or twice (36%) a day, listening for up to an hour at a
time. (42% listen to radio for up to half an hour, while 38% listen for between half an
hour and an hour.)
The youngest listeners (15-24 year-olds) listen most frequently, with more of them
listening 3 times a day than any other age group.
Women’s listening patterns appear to be split. More women than men listen for half an
hour or less, and for more than 2 hours.
42
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
More 35 to 44-year-olds are likely to listen for less than half an hour a day.
Phone-in programmes
Phone-in programmes are popular, with three-quarters (76%) tuning in to a phone-in in
the month prior to the survey. They are most popular with women, rural audiences and
with younger listeners.
Calling in to a phone-in
Although most people listen to phone-ins, less than a sixth of people (14%) call in
themselves. The youngest listeners are more likely to call in (17%).
Of those who have called in to a programme, most say they called to request a song
(54%), while others say they called to discuss health problems (20%) or to debate social
problems (19%).
Calling in to request a song is most popular among the youngest listeners (66%), while
five times as many men (28%) as women (5%) call in to debate social problems.
TV habits
Approximately 67% of Cambodians are TV viewers. 44
Among TV viewers, there are more men (74%), more urban respondents (91%), more of
the youngest respondents (72%), and the highest proportions of TV viewers are among
those with higher levels of education. There are significantly fewer Mountain viewers
(50%).
International film series and Khmer series are more popular among women (83%, 65%)
and younger respondents (82% and 60% respectively for respondents aged 15-24).
News is more popular among male respondents (83%) than female respondents.
Sports programmes are most popular with men (57%) and with respondents from the
oldest age group (45%).
44
For the purposes of this study, we have defined ‘TV viewer’ as someone who watched TV within the month prior to the
survey.
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Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Concerts and comedy (69%) and song programmes (31%) are most popular among the
youngest respondents.
Most (55%) watch TV once a day, with most watching for more than half an hour. (42%
say they watch for between half an hour and an hour, while 36% say they watch for more
than an hour.)
Most TV viewers (66%) watch between 6pm and 8pm in the evening, with more than half
(52%) viewing between 8pm and 10pm. A quarter (26%) tune in for the lunchtime slot
between midday and 2pm.
Men tune in earlier than women. Twice as many men (25%) as women (13%) tune in
between 6am and 8am.
More of the youngest group (15-24), watch in the morning and early afternoon, when
33% of them tune in between midday and 2pm. More women (29%) and urban (34%)
also tune in during the 12-2pm slot.
TV channels
The most popular TV channels in Cambodia are:
Almost all TV viewers can remember which channel they watch, unlike radio listeners.
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Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Mobile phone access
There are no significant differences between men and women in relation to access to a
mobile phone.
Higher proportions of urban residents, and those with higher education levels and from
the higher PPI groups, have access to a mobile. Indeed, 100% of university-educated
respondents have access to a mobile.
Respondents from the Mountain region have least mobile access, with only 82% able to
access a mobile phone.
More men (69%), urban residents (70%), and those with higher education and from
higher PPI groups own mobile phones.
Far fewer women (at 50%, almost 20 percentage points lower than the figure for men)
own mobiles.
Lower rates of phone ownership are also found among residents of Tonle Sap (52%)
and Coastal regions (58%), the youngest respondents (56%), and those with lower
educational levels and from lower PPI groups.
More rural residents (32%), and those living in regions other than Phnom Penh and Plain
(at 17% and 23% respectively, fewer people from these regions rely on relatives), use a
relative’s phone. Many more of the youngest respondents (42%) use a relative’s phone,
as do those with lower education levels and from the lower PPI groups.
Many more Coastal residents (38%) and more of those from the lower PPI groups rely
on phone booths for telephony services.
Far more women (23%) than men (3%) use their partner’s phone. More of those aged
25-44 use their spouse’s phone, as do those with lower education levels. Perhaps
surprisingly, more of those from the higher PPI groups say they use a partner’s phone.
More of those from lower PPI groups rely on neighbours and relatives, as well as phone
booths (around 10 percentage points above the average for each response among those
from the lowest PPI group).
More male (11%), more urban (9%), and more of the youngest respondents (15%) and
working youth (12%) say they use their friend’s phone.
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Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
More rural (8%), Coastal (7%) and Mountain (10%) residents, and those with lower
education levels and from the lower PPI groups say they use a phone belonging to a
neighbour.
More men (55%) than women (47%) use Mobitel. There are no significant gender
differences for Metphone.
A higher proportion of older people uses Mobitel (57% of the oldest users, against 39%
of the youngest users), while a greater proportion of younger people uses Metphone
(62% of the youngest users, compared to 39% of the oldest users). Importantly, those
from the lowest PPI group tend to use Metphone (69%), while those from higher PPI
groups use Mobitel.
Messaging
Of those who use a mobile’s messaging function, most (82%) use it to send SMS using
English characters. Almost 4 in 10 (39%) send template messages, and more than 2 in
10 send messages in Khmer.
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Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
More urban people (92%) send English SMS.
More men (42%) and more of the younger age groups, particularly 25-34 year-olds, send
template SMS.
Although almost half of all respondents say they use mobile phones to take pictures (see
Mobile phone functions, above), very few (2%) currently send pictures by SMS.
Print media
Detailed questions were not asked about print media consumption. However, print media
clearly has a far more limited reach than TV and radio, with only 12% saying they ever
read newspapers, and just 9% saying they read magazines, for information.
Similarly, when asked whether they used any information sources not contained in the
list used to prompt this question, less than 2% chose to mention additional sources of
information. Given that other forms of print media – flyers, leaflets, posters, and so on –
were not mentioned in the prompt list, this indicates that less than 1%, if any,
respondents spontaneously recalled these media formats.
Internet Use
Very few people (4%) have used the internet. Of these, many more live in urban areas
(8% of urban residents say they use the internet) than rural areas (where less than 2%
say that they use the internet).
The profile of internet users is young, urban and highly educated and from the higher
PPI groups. A greater proportion of internet users is found in Phnom Penh, although
there are some users in every region.
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Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Movie series 89%
Songs 71%
Comedy 35%
Most people watch DVD/VCDs at their own house (65%), with friends (26%), with
relatives (19%), or in coffee shops (16%).
Outreach Activities
More than half (56%) of respondents say they were involved in outreach activities during
the month preceding the survey. Only 15% say they have never been involved in
outreach.
Outreach preferences
Different outreach activities appear to attract different audiences.
Women prefer activities using show cards (33%), or education in the home and with their
families (25%).
Educational plays are more popular with the youngest respondents (29% of those aged
15-24), and by those with high school education (30%).
Workshops are more popular with urban respondents (17%) with higher levels of
education (44% of those with a university education) and from the higher PPI groups
(20% of those with a PPI of 75-100).
The following analysis is based on the findings from the 101 interviews. The quotes that
are used to illustrate the findings were selected from the 101 interview transcripts using
45
The four following provinces are not represented: Svay Rieng, Stung Treng, Banteay Meanchey and Ratanakiri.
48
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Atlas.ti coding software and reflect interesting and prominent themes emerging from the
data. To protect the anonymity of interviewees, their names are not included in the
analysis. Some of the views presented here indicate misconceptions held by certain
individuals or groups and do not reflect the views of the Trust or the Ministry of
Environment. (See Appendix 1 for more detail on the Methodology.)
Although the terms ‘climate change’ and ‘global warming’ are familiar to most key
informants, the meaning of these words is not widely understood. As one government
representative says,
…Politicians use the term…‘climate change’, but it doesn’t clearly indicate the
cause and effect of climate change. We just feel that it is hot or cold, or we know
that there is flooding, for instance. But this word doesn’t tell us about the effects
of climate change, or who will be affected by climate change.
Few have heard of the terms ‘greenhouse effect’ or ‘greenhouse gases’. Considerable
confusion surrounds these terms, even among key informants who use them
spontaneously and have detailed technical knowledge of the causes and impacts of
climate change. This confusion appears to stem from the Khmer translation for the
greenhouse effect, Phal Ptash Kanhchork (See Translating Climate Change, pError!
Bookmark not defined.). This is understood to refer to a ‘glass house effect’ – and few
Cambodians have ever seen a greenhouse. This leads to a number of
misapprehensions.
49
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
There are a number of other misconceptions as well, the most common being the
erroneous connections drawn between the expressions ‘climate change’, ‘global
warming’ and ‘greenhouse effect’ and people’s knowledge of the depletion of the ozone
layer.
The earth is being protected by the ozone layer. The ozone layer is the ‘glass’.
Meanwhile the term ‘greenhouse’ refers to a kind of nursery. It’s for when people
grow plants, they have to keep them under glass to keep them warm. It is similar
to the earth. The sunlight that has shone on the earth can’t reflect back through
the ozone layer. Therefore, warming is increasing.
Industry representative
Key informants say they have heard the terminology from a variety of sources. Almost all
opinion leaders say that they have heard the term ‘climate change’ through TV and
radio. Many mention both national and international media as a source of information on
the subject.
Some mention newspapers as a source, and a few say they have used the internet to
find out more about the subject. Some village chiefs and elders point out that they have
limited access to media.
Commune council leaders and village chiefs frequently say they have heard about
climate change from older members of the community:
I heard [about climate change] from the older generation. They always say that it
did not happen in the past.
Commune council leader
Many government representatives, industry and NGO representatives have heard about
climate change through their work.
Perceived causes
Many key informants have seen or heard coverage of extreme weather events in the
national and international media. They connect high temperatures in India, drought in
Africa and the melting of the polar icecaps to the term ‘climate change’. Some also
describe earthquakes, tsunamis and volcanic eruptions as impacts of climate change.
All key informants make a link between climate change and deforestation:
50
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Forest loss causes climate change….It…leads to a lack of rain, and then the heat
increases…
Commune council leader
Global warming means whatever is damaged and worn out causes the
[temperature] to change. This is what I think and see actually. Take the case of
the northern forest. In the past, the forest was too thick to walk through, but now,
just looking at the location, you can see it is all open air, you cannot see any
trees, not a single tree. As for the cattle herds, they once tended the cattle and
sheltered under the trees, and the cattle ate grass and leaves by the hills. Now,
there is not one tree to shelter beneath.
Village elder
Most connect climate change to localised pollution from industry, motor vehicles and
other machinery; the use of chemicals, particularly fertilizers; and the production of
smoke, particularly from cars and other motor vehicles:
Only some key informants, mostly national government and NGO representatives, make
direct links between the causes and effects of climate change at the global level:
We have contributed [to climate change], but we are not taking responsibility
because we have just begun to emit, unlike.... developed countries, which have
been emitting…since the eighteenth century. They have produced too many
emissions.
NGO representative, Phnom Penh
Some key informants from across the different groups inaccurately link ‘climate change’
and ‘global warming’ to the depletion of the ozone layer, rather than correctly connecting
it to the greenhouse effect:
All countries have created electricity. All factories have produced smoke [which]
destroys the ozone layer...It has caused the ozone layer to become thinner... The
temperature is very hot when the ozone layer is very thin. That is climate change.
Commune council leader
Some key informants from across Cambodian society, of Buddhist, Christian and Muslim
faiths, draw on their religious belief to explain the concept, as the words of one
government representative illustrate:
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Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
…We should appreciate the [words of] Buddha, who predicted around 2500
years ago that the world would burn…and everything would be destroyed. There
is no one wiser than the Buddha, as we can see the climate is changing from day
to day. My generation will only live another thirty or forty years, but the next
generation [has] to think what they need to do every day to protect the earth and
to respond to climate change. You must do what you can, because few people
understand this.
Government representative
Some of the explanations provided by some village chiefs, commune council leaders,
religious leaders and provincial governors suggest they are not as well informed about
climate change as those in national government. Some of these key informants perceive
that mobile phones and mobile transmitters, weapons and atomic bombs could play a
role in altering the weather.
I want to tell you what humans have done to cause climate change. For example,
people have created missiles. They have contributed to climate change. They
have created atomic bombs. These have affected the climate as well, because
they contain chemicals. They have affected the climate. In addition, transmitters
have affected the climate. There are many mobile phone transmitters in our
country.
Provincial governor
Perceived impacts
Almost all key informants say they have observed weather changes over the course of
their lifetimes. These include less predictable seasons, diminished rainfall, hotter
temperatures, more storms, more frequent and severe flooding, and more frequent
thunder and lightning. Key informants working in coastal areas mention more frequent
flooding and higher sea levels. Several say that water levels in the Mekong are
unusually low, or that they have been fluctuating unusually in recent years. The
comments of many key informants living in rural areas suggest that changing weather
patterns may be overturning traditional ways of understanding weather:
In the past, we could predict rainfall without having to listen to the weather
forecast. Now, we cannot predict it, even when we see dark clouds, heavy wind
and hear the sound of thunder.
Religious leader
All key informants are concerned that the weather changes will have a negative impact
on agricultural production, and that this will have implications for food security. A
considerable number of key informants say that climate change will have a negative
impact on people’s livelihoods and should be considered as a barrier to addressing
poverty. They also connect hotter temperatures, diminished rainfall and water supplies,
and greater food insecurity, to an increase in disease. Diarrhoeal disease, particularly, is
frequently mentioned:
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Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Diarrhoea, malaria, cholera… as you hear on the radio, in recent months in some
provinces there has been bad cholera which has caused many deaths. Because
of a lack of hygiene and sanitation, or when there is heavy rain in that area or
drought, people drink water from any source that they can find, often untreated
sources, because there is a water shortage in rural areas.
Religious leader
Although many are concerned about the potential impacts of climate change in
Cambodia, most think that the country is not yet as badly affected as other countries.
Even among those with a limited understanding of the concept of climate change, there
is a feeling that Cambodia will eventually experience its impacts, as other countries have
done already:
It has not so far impacted Cambodia, [so] it has not been an attractive issue [in
the media]…We were always worried when we heard [about climate change in]
sub-Saharan [Africa]. But now it is not just the Sahara. Now it is near Beijing. So
people are worried that soon it will arrive at Wat Phnom.
Media representative
Urban people know about it. [They] know a lot about what has caused the hot
weather because they have read newspapers and magazines…But for rural
people, they only know about …their [own] experience.
Media representative
Beyond the question of access to information, key informants make two clear distinctions
between the ways in which the public perceive climate change. Some key informants
focus on whether the term ‘climate change’ is well understood. Others, meanwhile,
explain that the largely rural population has an experiential understanding of climate
change: that they are already living with its effects.
On the subject of terminology, many key informants point out they do not understand it
themselves. Others think that the translations in Khmer do not adequately convey the
meaning of the term. Some point out that ‘akas theat’ does not convey the term ‘climate’.
One Cambodian celebrity identifies a challenge that is alluded to by others when he says
that the term ‘climate‘ sounds ‘a bit technical’.
Other key informants approach the question differently. They explain that Cambodian
people have observed changes in the weather over time, but that they do not perceive
that these changes could be part of a larger problem. As one media representative says,
‘people have started to recognize that there is a change, but they do not know why there
is a change’. A commune council leader observes:
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Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Generally, people know about the temperature increasing. They are always
complaining that the rain is not regular now... It is very hard to live…They
understand about this situation, but they might not understand our language.
They say that the weather is abnormally hot now, that now there are many kinds
of insects that have come to destroy their crops… They are using that kind of
language every day. It means they have understood that the climate has
changed.
Their comments indicate that most key informants agree with this analysis. Some say
that the public would understand climate change if more were done to connect the term
‘climate change’ to its effects. As a representative from one Cambodian NGO explains:
I’d like to tell them about [the] effects of [climate change]…That way, it is easy for
them to understand. For example, we could spend a day explaining climate
change to them and they wouldn’t understand. Instead, we should ask them why
there is no rain, and why the temperature is so high, and what the reasons are.
NGO representative
The challenge of understanding climate change is not just relevant to people living in
rural areas, however. One NGO representative working on climate change explains that
it is hard to find documents on the subject in Khmer language, even with access to the
internet. One celebrity who has a relatively strong grasp of the issue explains:
I am always chatting with people about [climate change], and assessing their
knowledge and concern. I am a teacher, a ceremony master, and an internet
user, [and even] I have not understood about it very well.
Celebrity
When asked directly whether Cambodia has contributed to climate change, or where
responsibility lies for causing climate change, other key informants allude to the
responsibility of industrialized countries for climate change, frequently in vague terms:
Rich countries created the problem. They should be worried. (...) Those countries
should help us to make sure that we will not repeat their history.
NGO representative
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Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
The focus of most explanations of the causes of climate change, however, is
deforestation within Cambodia. Responsibility for the loss of trees is largely attributed to
people in rural areas who cut the trees to clear the land for agriculture, burn the wood for
fuel, or to sell as charcoal or firewood.
Although responsibility for tree-cutting is ascribed to rural people, most key informants
recognise that the reasons for the loss of forest are complex. Some allude to the
massive deforestation that occurred from 1979, while others explain that poor rural
people depend on selling firewood and charcoal to supplement their livelihoods. They
draw a connection between poverty and tree-cutting.
Others explain that laws to prevent illegal deforestation and not enforced:
[The government] keeps telling people to stop cutting the trees, but people are
still cutting them. And other people are planting…We have laws but people do
not follow the law.
Village chief
Climate change is frequently conflated with more general environmental degradation and
pollution. In this respect, climate change is linked to a lack of appropriate strategies to
manage the environment. Specifically, key informants mention poor waste management
systems, and pollution of waterways by sewage and chemicals.
The more the population grows, the more waste is produced and flows into the
river. People get sick with cholera when they use this water… Excrement and
urine are discharged into the river directly because there are no toilets by the
river.
Village chief
A few express concern that Cambodia is contributing to climate change and damaging
the environment by importing ‘second hand products’ such as cars and motorbikes, that
people in other countries no longer consider fit for use:
Another cause [of climate change] is that we import second-hand products, which
affect the local environment… If they are old, they are sure to affect the
environment. Some examples of these second-hand products are motorbikes
and cars. In other countries, people stop using them, but we import them, without
tax payment, into Cambodia. The smoke from those motor vehicles is dark and
contains polluting gases.
Provincial governor
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Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
What response is required?
Key informants identify several important barriers to responding to climate change. Most
say that a lack of information on climate change means that they themselves do not
know how to support people in their organisations or communities to address the
problem:
I do not know what resources I need because I do not understand [about climate
change]. But I think the best resource is knowledge.
Commune council leader
Many explain that the number of competing concerns, at both the level of government
and within people’s lives, mean that climate change is not treated as a priority:
We have not [yet] had any educational campaign. And the policy is only operating
at the highest level. At the grassroots level, people are too busy with concerns in
their daily lives. They are thinking about utility fees, money, inflation, corruption,
and so on. They have to think about many things related to their daily lives. So
they don’t have time to think about the climate change issue. People do not think
about it at all.
Media representative
Financial challenges are one of the main concerns identified by key informants. A
considerable number, including NGO representatives and government officials at every
level, describe the mutually destructive relationship between climate change and
poverty, with one frustrating attempts to address the other:
We want to stabilize the finances and we don’t like the way that we have to base
[budgets] on funding from donors for only a short period of time. So we must
allocate a budget for climate change [without depending on donor approach or
donor base], in the same way that I have designed social protection projects
without depending on donor funding.
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Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
We want the government to approve the budget annually from the Ministry of
Finance. For example, the Ministry of Finance should allocate 10% of GDP for
climate change projects. This is what we want to see in the future.
Government representative
Most feel that knowledge of the issue is confined to the national government, and is not
yet reaching other groups. As an NGO representative explains, ‘we have information in
the ministry, but dissemination is very limited’. Many key informants look to the
government to lead the response to climate change and most say information provision
should be central to this response. Many key informants say that representatives from
every level of government need to be involved, particularly those responsible for leading
communities. Most key informants think that the media has an important role to play in
the national response and say that radio and TV spots should be used to provide
information to people.
Cabinet members and their representatives are among the key informants with the highest
levels of technical expertise on the subject of climate change. Comments from key informants
more generally, however, suggest that the technical and political expertise within this sector
has not yet been disseminated widely enough to reach people working at the local, province
or district levels.
The government members and their representatives interviewed for the purposes of the
research are among the key informants with the highest levels of technical expertise on
the subject of climate change. Almost all national government representatives appear to
have extensive knowledge of government programming on climate change, and can
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Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
describe coordination initiatives within national government in detail. Some of them are
aware of the international political aspects of the climate change debate, such as the
Kyoto protocol, and the Conference of the Parties in Copenhagen held in December
2009. However, comments from key informants more generally suggest that the
technical and political expertise within this sector has not yet been disseminated widely
enough to reach people working at the local, province or district levels.
… It is like a shield that protects [the earth] from sunlight…It is made up of many
gases. The core gas is carbon dioxide…People are paying attention to carbon
dioxide. Why are people paying attention to it? Because it has increased
warming. Normally, when the sunlight shines on the earth, some [has] been
reflected back into the atmosphere. But what has caused the warming on the
ground? It is caused by carbon dioxide… [Now], when the sunlight shines on the
earth, it is not reflected back out.
The priority problems will be different from one institution to another …The
important thing is that we should have a unifying mechanism in order to make the
problems go together, because each problem cannot be separated from the
other.
…We would like to see climate change [treated] as inter-sectoral. Not just as the
work of the Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries, for example, or the
Ministry of Water Resources and Meteorology, or the Ministry of Environment,
but as inter-sectoral.
Certainly, there is evidence that many different government departments have taken this
message to heart, as illustrated by the comments of one government representative in
relation to the need for a ‘green economy’:
I’m not talking about the green economy yet, but [ecotourism] could also
contribute to the green economy. If we can implement it well and earn a lot of
money from ecotourism, we can consider it as part of the green economy. But
talk about the word ‘green economy’ has not gone far enough yet. It should
include green jobs and other things, such as hotels. They should stop using
electricity and private generators and use solar energy or wind power instead.
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Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
One government representative explains why coordination is so essential:
The government has many objectives, but we have tried to collect these
objectives together in one place. The first objective is to respond to emergency
needs. For example, when there is a flood, storm or drought…the government
will have to respond immediately to people’s needs by distributing food... When a
road is cut off, we have to reconstruct it. These are related to climate change and
natural disasters. The second objective is supporting maternal and child health. I
do not think this objective is much related to climate change. The third objective
that we are working hard on is the public works programme… For instance, for
people who don’t have jobs in one place because they have experienced
drought. Drought has an impact on the agricultural sector, so people will force
themselves to migrate to other places. We do not want people to migrate, so we
create occupations for people where they live. Local occupations will help to
improve the agricultural sector and other related sectors. If we build rural roads,
people can access rural areas from urban ones. One example is that if we build
the road, we have to think about the climate change scenario. Normally floods
come up to one metre, so we construct roads at heights of one-and-a-half
metres… [So] we will construct the road at heights of two metres to cope with the
changing floods…We also have land use planning for reforestation. The fourth
objective is also important for climate change and it is related to public health. I
believe that one indication of climate change is the outbreak of malaria. If we
have a lot of malaria outbreaks, it means that climate change is more and more
serious. Before thinking about the infrastructure, we should pay more attention to
social assistance in order to help protect people from the outbreak [of malaria].
The fifth objective is related to especially vulnerable groups in society. This
objective aims to see who the vulnerable groups of people are and those people
have suffered social shocks.
…Currently when people talk about climate change, they are referring to negative
impacts which have resulted from natural disasters. People think that these are
46
For more information on the Cambodia Climate Change Alliance:
http://www.un.org.kh/undp/~docs/projects/docs/Prodoc_00073625_CCCA.pdf
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Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
climate change. The impacts have increased over the last several years [but] we
have to find the causes. At an early stage, we can’t count them as climate
change.
Although most of their expertise is concentrated at the national and international political
level, all government representatives focus on the potential impact of climate change on
people’s livelihoods. Their comments suggested that inter-ministerial communication has
helped government representatives draw links between current events and the
challenges posed by climate change:
I have seen reports from three ministries. First, there is the report from the
Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries, which reported that the rain has
been delayed, so the cultivation period is delayed too. As far as I know, few
people have been able to farm at this time. If we consider [the situation] now, the
potential for farming is lower than last year.
Two principal barriers to implementing a national climate change response emerge from
the comments of government representatives. One is a lack of financial support:
I can tell you what I’ve heard; that 200 million dollars have been requested for
just one National Adaptation Plan of Action (NAPA) programme, while we
[currently] have only ten million dollars for nineteen programmes.
The other is a lack of information on climate change across Cambodian society. One
parliamentarian with a prominent role in the national response to climate change
emphasises that ‘education and dissemination of information on climate change to the
public’ is one of the priorities of the National Strategic Development Plan (NSDP).
One government representative points out that there is a lack of understanding of the
issue outside national government:
It is not only at the commune level that this is not understood; even the mid- level
doesn’t [understand].
Some efforts have clearly been made to encourage implementation of climate change at
the local level:
[Our organisation] has tried not to implement climate change projects directly, but
has let the ministries do this, by encouraging implementation at the level
of…provincial and commune councils.
However, the comments of officials working at the commune and village levels indicate
that much needs to be done to translate the planning at the level of national government
to implementation of programmes on the ground, as indicated by a typical comment from
one commune council leader:
I do not know which public institutes in the province understand climate change
or are responsible for climate change.
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Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Provincial governors
The extent to which provincial governors have a technical understanding of global
climate change is difficult to assess, given the mixed understanding among the small
number interviewed for the research. While some have a more detailed understanding of
the causes of climate change, and recognise that it is a global phenomenon with global
causes, others appear to hold some misconceptions about climate change. They all
agree, however, that the climate is changing and many of them give personal accounts
of the changes they have observed themselves:
I have lived here since 1979 until now. Before, the water was far away from the
trees, but now the water covers the beach and there is almost no beach for
playing on. If we plant more trees we will expand our beach. The problem is that
the water level is rising… Most of the rice fields near the sea had never been
damaged by the floods before, but now I heard that they have been flooded and
that water is accumulating at Prey Nop. Last year, the water that accumulated at
Prey Nop destroyed a lot of people’s paddy… The rise in sea levels causes salt
water to flow into the fields and affects the crops of people who live in that
district. So it damages the rice because rice can’t grow in salty water. It still fails
even when the normal water comes back, because being flooded by salt water
for such a long time. [People] get nothing, if the rice crop is damaged. I already
said that the rise in sea water can cause bad results for the people who live near
the beach area that do farming with rice and so on. In past centuries, around one
thousand hectares were destroyed. I have been [here] since 1979. I have never
seen seawater flow into the river water like this, so I regard the rise in sea levels
as an impact of climate change, and also [a way of explaining] the meaning.
As I was saying about the Mekong River, in the past, the river level increased
and decreased normally, but now the river level increases and decreases
unpredictably. For example, last year the river increased by 23 metres, but the
river has never been like this normally in the past. In general, it rises by 20
metres; then it falls. So the water was not sufficient for people to irrigate their
farms this year, during both seasons. The river level has been really low. Until
today, the river level was at its lowest point. 20 years ago, at this point in the
year, if people’s farms were on the riverbank, people were quick to harvest their
maize in case the rise in the level of the river flooded the fields. This was in
1979… In June 1979, the water rose right up to the bank, and in 1978 in Kratie
people rode double-decker boats down the road because the water came up so
high. Now the water does not flood the province. In the past, we were afraid of
the rainy season. When the season approached, we – that is to say local and
provincial authorities or committees – had to prepare in case of flooding.
Nevertheless, the rain now is like it was before, but we know that the river does
not come up as high as before. However, we can’t assume that there won’t be
any disasters in terms of flood because some countries never had floods before,
but when there was a flood, cars and houses were flooded… The weather is
irregular.
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These accounts are illustrative of the way in which provincial governors approach the
subject of climate change. Rather than focus on the causes of climate change, as those
with technical expertise tend to do, they discuss the impacts of climate change and
support this with reference to personal observation. They say that rains are irregular
now, that temperatures are higher and that there are more frequent storms:
We did not have storms. Or we did, but they were very rare. Floods, too, were
very rare. During my life, I only saw them once in the past. But now they take
place very often. We had one in 2000 and then ... we have had one almost every
year in Kompong Speu. You might know about this the floods in Kompong Speu.
People are very poor. But after the flood the water has gone. People do not have
water to do agriculture. It is very difficult for people. The impacts from floods and
droughts are the same.
Some say flooding occurs more frequently and in coastal areas they are concerned by a
rise in sea level and subsequent saltwater intrusion. Several mention low water levels in
the Mekong River, and low levels of water at dams, meaning that there is less water for
farm irrigation. They link these changes to impacts on health, citing recent incidences of
diarrhoeal disease and other diseases requiring hospital treatment, and deaths caused
by lightning during thunder storms, which they say are more frequent:
Normally, we have more than enough water in July. We were scared of floods in
July. But now, based on what we have seen by the road, we can tell that very few
farms have transplanted their rice. And some of them have transplanted onto dry
soil. We do not have enough water. So we can see the impact. People cannot do
agriculture. And we get diseases from climate change. It makes us sick. Those
impacts have brought people to poverty.
They all express concern that the lack of predictability in weather patterns, combined
with a lack of preparation among rural communities, makes people very vulnerable:
In Cambodia, if people get a large yield from their farm, they will sell it. They will
keep only enough to feed them for a day… If there was no rain and they could
not farm, what would they do for the next year? What would they eat? This is a
problem for them. They say it is not only humans that get sick but also animals
such as cows, pigs, and chickens. I have no idea about that, [but] chickens die
when the weather is very hot.
Rural areas are more heavily affected because rural areas are responsible for
agricultural production. If there is no rain, the farms fail. There is no hope.
Farmers [here] pin their hopes on rain because [we] have no main canal or
smaller channels like in Pursat. [Here we are] located on higher land, so when it
rains, the water flows to the lower land.
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Provincial governors make the most diverse range of connections between climate
change and other aspects of society of any key informants in the sample. Not only do
they connect the impacts to agriculture and health, as do all key informants. They also
see the implications of climate change for the transport sector, both because of the
carbon emissions generated by this sector, and because of the consequences of
flooding for transportation in the country. They connect climate change to increased
incidences and severity of droughts, and identify these as a trigger for migration.
Provincial governors also explore the possibility that climate change could affect women
disproportionately. They perceive that women could be more vulnerable to water
shortages because of their domestic responsibilities, including fetching water. One says
that ‘gender equity is still an issue in the community’. Another makes the observation
that it is ‘mostly housewives’ who come forward to request assistance from the
authorities in the case of floods, storms or problems with farming. He adds, though, that
‘some women don’t dare to speak‘ to figures of authority and ‘ask men to replace them’
in discussions of this type.
Beyond their own observations, the most common sources of information on climate
change for provincial governors appears to be the national and international media, radio
in particular. All governors, though, mention other organisations working on the issue.
They mention government ministries, including the Ministry of Environment, Ministry of
Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries, Ministry of Water Resources and Meteorology and
the Ministry of Women’s Affairs. A few refer to a speech given by Prime Minister Hun
Sen in 2009. NGOs are also mentioned as a source, with WWF, WorldVision and the
Cambodian Red Cross mentioned by name – the latter in the context of disaster
response. Some say they have learned about climate change through workshops,
websites, and a few through newspapers. One mentions the Women’s Association for
Peace and Development, explaining that their work is particularly focused on ‘preventing
smoke’.
The variety of sources on climate change identified by provincial governors suggests that
government efforts to engage the provincial level in the climate change response are
achieving some success.
Provincial governors in some areas make explicit reference to the national response to
climate change. When asked what he knows about government activities on climate
change, one provincial governor replies:
Others say that they are not implementing national programmes within their province. All
however, mention at least one government initiative, including work to reduce carbon
dioxide emissions; investment in hydropower; education programmes to discourage
people from using chemical fertilisers and burning their surplus; tree-planting
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programmes; and government policy on raising awareness of the impacts of climate
change among the public.
At the level of their provinces, some say they are working on programmes to reduce
firewood and coal consumption; raise awareness of climate change and ‘change
people’s perceptions’; select and introduce new seed varieties and increase rice
productivity; and work on replanting trees and mangroves.
When asked what the barriers are to implementing programmes, provincial governors
identify several obstacles. The principal obstacle, mentioned by many key informants, is
that poverty prevents most people thinking about anything beyond their immediate,
everyday needs. A barrier specific to coordinating work on climate change at the
province and commune level is identified by one provincial governor, who explains that
they have attempted to gather representatives from different villages within communes.
Such an attempt at coordination has been frustrated, however, by the cost of
transportation, with individuals finding it hard to travel from their villages for the meeting.
Unsurprisingly, in light of these comments, provincial governors say that there is a need
for more funding for climate change projects. They also say they need financial support,
and better provision of resources. Several explain that their communities need seed
adapted to higher temperatures, disease, and drought. Others say they need pumps and
gasoline to irrigate their fields. Along with these resources and financial support, there is
much emphasis on the need for information provision, including through media.
Specifically, provincial governors suggest that there is a need for ‘role models’ to
communicate on climate change; that there should be educational spots on climate
change; that radio should be used to broadcast information on climate change; and that
the UN should do more to communicate what is being done globally to respond to
climate change. One explains why he thinks the Ministry of Agriculture should be
involved in communicating to people on climate change:
The Ministry of Agriculture…plays a very important role. When people can’t get
yields from their agriculture, the Ministry can show them about the impacts of the
climate change. They will accept it when people explain the reasons that they
cannot get yields. Most people do not care much about anything that does not
affect them [directly].
Although commune council leaders associate the term ‘climate change’ with global
phenomena, such as drought and extreme temperatures in other parts of the world,
their explanations of climate change tend to focus on localised deforestation and
weather changes within Cambodia.
All commune council representatives have heard the term ‘climate change’. They tend to
explain the term in reference to changes in the weather, such as increases in
temperature and changes in rain patterns. These changes in the weather are often
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described as having happened in the recent past. Members of the commune council
mention TV, radio and word-of-mouth – particularly the older generation – as sources
from which they have heard the term ‘climate change’:
I heard [about climate change] from the old generation. They always said that it
did not happen in the past.
Several commune council representatives say they have heard about ‘climate change’
from international news:
I watched the international news and saw that many people died because the
weather [in Africa] was too hot.
Almost all members of commune councils think of ‘climate change’ as a global problem,
perhaps as a result of exposure to such news outputs. Fewer of them say they recognise
the term ‘global warming’. Very few recognise the term ‘greenhouse effect’ and none
know how to explain it:
Most say that the weather is changing. Commune council leaders attribute this to a
combination of natural causes and human activities. It is impossible to separate their
accounts of the ways in which the weather has changed from environmental degradation
more broadly:
If people had not done anything, the climate would not change. When they have
done things such as producing tyres, it has produced very strong smells and
huge impacts. It has spread out a lot of smoke. But the owners have not
understood how much their work has impacted on the environment. It has
impacted on human health and climate change. If they had done the same as
me, the climate would not change... [But] they are using technology, creativity,
new initiatives...
When asked what causes the weather to change, all mention deforestation. Most make
reference to tree-cutting by people within their communes, but some say deforestation
can be attributed to illegal logging on a larger scale. Many connect weather change to
the use of chemical fertilisers and pesticides, which they also link to diseases among the
population, and to the emergence of pests on crops. Other associations are made,
though less frequently, between weather changes and waste disposal and water
pollution. A few allude to the perceived impacts of mobile transmitters in their
explanations of what causes the weather to change:
I heard people say that many phone transmitters would wear out the leaves on
the palm trees. I found it was true when I checked.
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Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Many make a direct link between the production of smoke – through motor vehicle use,
machinery and factory production – and an increase in temperature:
The temperature on the earth is increasing because motors and cars have
produced a lot of smoke.
Most link the term ‘climate change’ to the degradation of the natural environment through
development. One says that ‘nature will be changed by development’.
Some also connect an increase in temperature to the depletion of the ozone layer:
When the ozone layer is thin, the sunlight shines on the earth very
strongly...When sunlight shines very strongly, the heat…makes people sick... We
have created factories and energy industries. All the gas industries could destroy
the ozone layer…When the smoke spreads out and goes up into space, it will
destroy the ozone layer.
All connect the term ‘climate change’ to the observed impacts of changes in the weather,
namely, negative impacts on human health, water resources, agricultural yields, and
livestock. In some communes, the drought in the past year is said to be especially bad.
For one commune council leader, local strategies for coping with drought are not working
as they usually do. Note the level of localisation in his description:
Normally, even if it doesn’t rain, the water fills the dam, so people can channel
the water to irrigate their crops, but this year, as I told you, the water is almost
gone. It has dropped right to the bottom, and there is not enough water to
channel to the fields. So everything is dammed up and people have not prepared
their farms here. Over there, though, the rice crops are growing well, because
people have water.
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Most commune council leaders say they have heard about government programmes on
tree-planting, and many are actively involved in tree-planting activities within their
commune. Some mention other programmes, including irrigation and farm diversification.
However, none have heard of any government programmes on climate change at any
level. Most have implemented tree-planting initiatives and some know of pollution
reduction programmes, although these are generally described in vague terms, such as
a reference to a project ‘to move factories out of the city’.
Yet most look to the government as a source of information on the subject. When asked
where they would go for information, many suggest they would listen to radio and watch
TV – especially news programmes – for more information on the subject. Of those who
mention government departments, most say they would address the Ministry of Water
Resources and Meteorology, the Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries and/or
the Ministry of Environment. A few mention the Ministry of Rural Development and some
have experienced working with the Cambodia Red Cross.
Commune council leaders say they need money and tools. Yet for many, the most
important resource for them in their role as commune council leaders is information:
I do not know what resources I need because I do not understand about [climate
change]. But I think the best [resource] is knowledge.
One commune council leader provides a useful insight into how people in his position
seek information on the subject of climate change:
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Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Many of the comments of commune council leaders suggest that the response to
extreme weather events is currently reactive:
We have not yet faced any serious problems from climate change. Once we
encounter a problem, we will be able to get a response.
However the issue of information dissemination is approached, one message that needs
to be communicated is that responses to climate change need to be planned in advance.
For village chiefs and elders, the primary source of information on the changing weather
is word-of-mouth. Most say that the changes in weather they have experienced are a
common subject of conversation within their communities. Many also say they have
heard the terms ‘climate change’ and ‘global warming’ through the TV and radio,
although several say their access to media is limited.
Many village chiefs say that they have heard villagers, particularly village elders,
discussing the changes in weather.
I've heard about it during ceremonies and wedding parties. The old people
formed a group to discuss it. Then, some old people, and some who are about
my age, from this village, were talking about climate change. And the cause is
partly greenhouse gases, but the main cause is the loss of forest, and smoke
from machines which makes it doubly hot…I am not sure [what ‘greenhouse gas’
means]. In rural areas like ours, we don't understand much about science.
It appears that their sources are not always well-informed on the subject, however:
I heard [the term ‘global warming’] from the older people. They say that the globe
will be hot one day. It is known as ‘fire day’. On ‘fire day’, the globe will be set on
fire.
Understanding of the phenomenon is very mixed among this group. All connect changes
in weather to deforestation within Cambodia. However, their comments suggest that this
is because they connect localized loss of forest to localized changes in the environment,
and consequently, to changes in the weather:
The environment has been changed by humans. In 1979, we had thick forest. But
now there is no forest or flooded forest. As a result, there is no shade on the
land, and that is why the land becomes dry.
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Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
More village chiefs connect deforestation to local activity by individuals, rather than
large-scale logging. They explain that people cut trees out of necessity:
Destructive activities took place because people faced financial difficulties. They
did not know how to earn a living besides selling firewood and cutting down the
trees. Why? Because villagers did not know of the problems that would come
later. They thought only about their livelihoods.
Many say they recognise the terms ‘climate change’ and ‘global warming’. In addition to
linking it to deforestation, they connect ‘climate change’ to gas emissions and smoke
from industry and motor vehicles:
One thing is factories, emitting gases. On the other hand, forests are being lost
through logging and areas being exposed to the open air. From my point of view,
very high temperatures are caused by the loss of forest and gas emissions from
factories.
It gets too hot when the temperature of the earth increases. I think it will cause
the earth to become thinner and thinner and then explode. I am not so clear
about it.
They said that the earth and sun were very close together, almost touching one
another. So scientists had to separate them or the earth would be set on fire… I
am not sure about it. I just heard it from the radio. I never went to any class.
One village chief describes the frustration felt within his community at not having
sufficient information on the reasons for the changing weather:
I don't know where to go for this kind of information .I would like to learn more
about it, though. I don’t know where I can learn more about climate change, and
the cause of the [warming of the earth]. My villagers want to know, as well…As I
told you before, the change in temperature from cold to hot is the root of the
problems in our country…it affects animals, it affects crops. So people worry and
are keen to know the reason for the increasingly high temperature, which is so
different from before. If they found out that you were the one who made it hot like
this, you wouldn’t be able to hang around here much longer!
Besides the impacts on agricultural livelihoods and food production, village chiefs and
elders say that the changing weather affects their communities’ health:
Climate change weakens our health through disease and low standards of living.
Why do I say this? With climate change, the two seasons approach unexpectedly
and irregularly, so we cannot cultivate in the right period in accordance with the
plants’ needs. Harvest time approaches, but there is no rain. Also, the period for
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cultivation ends up flooded…When we lack water, water shortages, we use water
we have collected. If we fail to maintain water quality successfully, then we drink
or use water containing viruses, and we get diarrhoea.
At the present time, my villagers are facing food shortages and their living
standards are low. This month, some families have run out of food.
Because of the heat and drought, parents push their children to help them pump
water into the fields by using pumping machines. It is what I observed during the
harvest… The children in my village go to school irregularly because farm work
depends on water.
Yet despite their concern, many village chiefs and elders say they and their communities
do not know what to do to respond to the challenges posed by the weather:
[People] just shout about the weather being hot, but they don't know how to
reduce the heat. They do not know how to prevent it. They just use scarves or
umbrellas to protect themselves from the heat.
This year, people who didn’t have wells attempted to dig two or three…. Families
have used them and the water hasn’t dried up. They also built dams and dug
canals for water storage to cope with the drought.
When asked which resources could help them respond, most mention fertiliser,
information on how to improve their agricultural techniques, dams, water channels, and
improved water sources, better roads, and information on climate change.
Most village chiefs and elders look to the government to give them information on the
subject of climate change:
I am thinking about the hot weather, but I don’t know what I can do…So I want …
the government to provide more detail on the issue so that it is easy for me to
explain to people.
I want the present government to explain to people why it’s unusually hot so that
people know why; for example, it’s hot due to greenhouse gases, deforestation,
and so on. I want a clear explanation.
There is clearly a need for information on climate change at the village level, where
leaders currently know nothing about the government response to climate change:
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I think the government is finding solutions, but I don’t know what they are doing.
Many village chiefs and elders suggest that the government should work with the media
to disseminate information about climate change to the public:
I believe that the government should organise dissemination so that we get more
information. If they cannot come to the villages… they should produce TV spots
and radio spots to broadcast to all members of the public.
Celebrities
Understanding of climate change is very mixed among this group. Celebrities’ explanations of
climate change centre on the impacts of climate change rather than the causes. The detail of
celebrities’ explanations indicates some important misapprehensions. All celebrities know that
climate change is a problem with global consequences. However, knowledge of the political
dimensions of the problem is patchy. Unique to this group is the belief that communication on
climate change should employ ‘scare tactics’ to persuade people of the importance of the issue.
The celebrities interviewed for the research all know the term ‘climate change’. They
explain the term with reference to changes in rainfall and increases in temperature, and
the impacts of these on farming and health within Cambodia. They also connect the term
to extreme weather events both in and outside the country:
All have heard the term ‘global warming’, although they are less sure of the meaning and
its implications for Cambodia. One explains that he is sceptical about the phenomenon:
I am not sure whether [global warming] is a rumour or what. [They say] the
earth’s temperature will increase and it could affect the future. I don’t know the
reason…When I went to the USA, I saw the news on TV about the ice melting so
quickly that it is a concern for the world…We don’t completely believe it, though.
If it melts very fast, then the world will be affected by flooding; the USA and other
developed countries will face this disaster. But I am not saying it’s true.
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with reference to harmful practices such as fish-shocking 47 and household fires. The
changes in the weather are sometimes attributed to the thinning or disappearance of a
‘layer’, a reference to ozone depletion, although ozone is not mentioned by name:
The sun shines directly on to the earth now. We do not have anything to protect
[us] from the sunlight. People have done something to destroy that layer. The
layer is almost gone.
Some think that the production of smoke produces changes in the weather:
In terms of climate change, [the situation in] Cambodia is not yet as serious as
other countries because [other countries] have many factories and produce a lot
of smoke.
More than one celebrity suggests that changes in weather may be the result of the earth
and sun moving closer together.
All celebrities know that climate change is a problem with global consequences.
However, knowledge of the political dimensions of the problem is patchy. A few
celebrities know there was an ‘international meeting’ to discuss climate change, but this
meeting is not named. There is little awareness of the political issues at stake. One
knows that international discussions concerned ‘emissions levels’; another thinks it
concerned the production of ‘chemicals and arsenals’, which she thinks have been found
to cause climate change.
All say that they heard the term ‘climate change’ through the media, especially television.
Most say they have watched international television, at home and abroad, and
international channels are mentioned most frequently as a source of information about
climate change.
Celebrities are interested in the role that media can play in raising awareness about
climate change. They all make suggestions for the ways in which media can
communicate with people on the subject. All say that communication on climate change
should ‘frighten’ people in order to have an impact:
I suggest we find a more serious term [than climate change] that will make
people feel scared.
47
Stunning fish using electric shocks in order to catch them.
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Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
We can use TV, we can use entertainment programmes… It will be good for
people to know about [climate change]. They will be scared when they find out
about it. They will not want the consequences to affect the next generation. We
can show them pictures. We will scare them, even though we do not want to use
negative things to educate people. But if we do not use this approach, then we
cannot get our message across to them.
These comments illustrate another point that is frequently made by celebrities: the need
to emphasise the effects of environmental damage on future generations:
One celebrity refers to the role that the Buddhist idea of karma could play in
encouraging people to care for the environment:
I believe people would take action immediately if you showed them that the
impacts would affect their lives. It is like the Buddhist principle…If Buddha told
me, ‘Do not hit other people because they might get hurt’, do you think I would
stop hitting you? Or change my mind? No. But Buddha uses the theory of karma:
‘If you hurt other people, you or your next generation will be hurt’. So people are
concerned that they will be hurt themselves. All people are selfish. They would
not do it if they knew the consequences of their actions.
The same celebrity outlines the limitations of previous media communication on the
environment. His comments reflect the emphasis placed on deforestation by both key
informants and the public:
I have not seen any organisation providing detailed information to people through
media. They are only scratching the surface by saying, ‘Let’s care for the
environment together’. They keep saying this… But how can people care for the
environment? They do not understand. People think that they only need to plant
trees to care for the environment. Sometimes, they only understand that point.
They do not care about other issues…about smoke from their motor bikes, and
so on.
Industry representatives
Industry representatives are among the most well-informed on the issue, with several referring
to the greenhouse effect and to carbon emissions spontaneously. Most say they have heard
the terms from the media, specifically news programmes on both Cambodian and international
channels. While others tend to explain the concept of climate change in relation to its impacts
on the country, industry representatives tend to connect the topic to the question of the causes
of the problem, particularly energy consumption, and they know that global climate change
poses a challenge to industry.
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Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Industry representatives are among the most well-informed on the issue. All industry
representatives are familiar with the terms ‘climate change’ and ‘global warming’.
Several mention the terms ‘greenhouse effect’ or ‘greenhouse gas’ spontaneously:
Most say they have heard the terms from the media, specifically news programmes on
both Cambodian and international channels. They all make a connection between these
terms and energy use, and variously to industrial, scientific and economic development.
There is considerable variation in their abilities to explain these terms, however. Some
industry leaders have a good technical understanding of the causes of climate change,
referring to carbon dioxide emissions and greenhouse gases. Others describe the
phenomenon in relation to more generalised pollution, using less specific terms, such as
‘poisonous gases’. A few relate climate change to ozone depletion, but this is less
prominent than among other groups interviewed for the research.
While many other key informants explain the concept of climate change in relation to its
impacts on the country, industry representatives tend to connect the topic to the question
of the causes of the problem, specifically energy consumption:
We need to use more power, so we have a worse effect on the environment. The
reason for this is that the more electricity we use, the more fuel we use, and it
releases poisonous gases into the atmosphere. I have also noticed that the
whole world is paying more attention to renewable energy nowadays.
All industry representatives know that the global industrial sector is implicated in climate
change. As such, most say that Cambodian industry should be considering related
questions:
The Ministry of Industry should think about climate change as well, because big
industries have caused it.
They are thinking of ways of using less energy and using it differently:
I learned [about the greenhouse effect] and put it into practice in my company…
[We] have implemented…a project called ‘clean production’. Its objective is to
reduce the greenhouse effect…by using resources effectively and so on. We
have worked to reduce smoke and waste because they have affected the
environment. Smoke from generators and other sources is causing the
greenhouse effect.
Given that Cambodian industry is already interested in the question of energy use, it
appears there is potential to engage the sector in mitigation activities:
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Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
I have used solar since 1999…It is running now. And ...our biogas is produced
from animal dung. [Both are] 50KW systems. Together, I have 112 KVA.
As I understand from the news, even the USA has a complex problem related to
climate change and industry. They can’t reduce it yet but they have a plan…that
we call carbon credits. All those developed countries [will use] these funds to
address the effects [of climate change].
The impacts, as well as the causes, are understood in an international context. Most feel
that Cambodia is not as badly affected by climate change as other countries are:
Media representatives
Media representatives appear interested in the topic of climate change. Currently, however, it
seems that climate change receives relatively little attention from the Cambodian media and
is largely treated as an environmental issue. Yet all suggest that media could play a role in
communicating on climate change. Media representatives point to the need to approach
climate change stories from new angles, to give journalists training on the subject, and to
provide guidance on how to approach the topic.
Many key informants recognise that the media has a role to play in providing information
and drawing people’s attention to the challenges posed by climate change. For their
part, media representatives appear interested in the topic and concerned by what they
have heard about climate change. They offer a number of suggestions for improving
media coverage. Currently, however, it seems that climate change receives relatively
little attention from the Cambodian media and is largely treated as an environment story.
While key informants from the media and non-media sectors have ideas for the ways in
which media could support a response to climate change, their potential for doing this is
currently limited by several factors.
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We often write about the rubbish dumps in Steung Meanchey….that’s related to
climate change and the environment.
Whether or not one agrees with this classification, it entails another important challenge:
environmental stories ‘don’t sell’:
[Let’s say] we have five or six stories. The editors start to classify them. Which
news do most people want to know? ...Environment is one of the topics and it is
at the bottom of the list. When they do not have space for it, it will be dropped…
So there needs to be a policy [on climate change]. Or the government has to
spend money for the media to educate people about it.
Media representative
Some media representatives point out that there is a need to train journalists on climate
change, a need that is reflected in the varied levels of knowledge of the subject among
media representatives interviewed for the research. It also seems that journalists might
be missing opportunities to draw links between the topics they cover and climate
change. One commune council chief seems to have inferred a message about climate
change from a radio programme, rather than it being an explicit message:
One day, I heard on the radio that they are reducing car use in France now. They
are encouraging people to use bicycles. They do not want people to use cars or
motorbikes because the smoke will pollute the air. Therefore, people [must be]
causing climate change by doing these activities.
One explains that there is a need for editorial guidelines for journalists:
News reporters need to have technical skills. News reporters have guidelines on
the HIV issue, for example. It is forbidden to use the term ‘HIV victim’. They do
not allow us to use this term and that term…It is similar to the climate change
issue, I think. We need to have guidelines for covering climate change.
Media representative
Despite apparent limitations to covering climate change in the current media landscape,
all of the media representatives interviewed have suggestions for ways in which the
media could support the response to climate change.
Some point to the possibility of media providing life-saving information about extreme
weather events:
I think that climate change could severely affect people in remote areas… Here
we have the internet so we can check the weather forecast. We know that
tomorrow or the day after tomorrow a storm will arrive. It has been blowing from
the Philippine gulf. We know ahead of time that it will blow through Laos and
Thailand…we are aware and can prepare. But they…cannot access the news.
They could die if they cannot access the news.
Media representative
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The comments of one politician suggest that there could be a role for media to play in
supporting politicians and those with technical expertise on climate change to
communicate in a way that people can understand:
Sometimes technical experts speak about the deep meaning of things, so they do
not make things clear to people. That is why we need people who are experts in
speaking. [We need the involvement of] politicians as well…but technical experts
are clearer than politicians, so they have to help each other.
Government representative
Most media representatives agree that lack of access to media is a barrier to some
communities – including women and rural people – receiving information, and so they
suggest alternative communication approaches:
The important thing I want you to use is mobile education…We do not use it
currently… [But] housewives are always at home. They do not have time to read.
But [mobile education] could attract them. They will want to know what we are
talking about in front of their houses.
Media representative
Others suggest that climate change be addressed through ‘drama or fiction’, and another
through comedy. One refers to the way that writer Gnait Sophorn has written about
deforestation to indicate the potential for addressing the topic of climate change in
fiction. A few say that the best messengers on climate change would be ‘artists’. Several
say they are interested in using ‘old people’ as sources of information or stories on
climate change.
NGO representatives
NGO representatives are well-informed on climate change. They appear familiar with the
terminology, and unlike many key informants, they give confident explanations of the causes
and effects. They are concerned about the ways in which the impacts of climate change on
agriculture, water resources and livelihoods will affect the most vulnerable populations. They
feel that these people lack the information and resources they need to respond. They
emphasise the need to involve leaders at the village and the commune level in communicating
to the public about climate change.
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Drought destroys farmers’ productivity. Here we are talking only about the impact
on agriculture. (...) It will be even more serious, if we look at the impact on their
lives.
Some are concerned that water is not managed sufficiently well in the country, and
express concern about the implications of water insecurity:
In the future, we might have conflicts over water...But it would not be a problem if
there were [better] water resources. In Cambodia, we have a big river. In the
rainy season, there is water everywhere. But we lack the capacity to control our
water resources. In Vietnam and Thailand, they have many water systems. Their
water system looks like blood vessels.
They say that the impacts of climate change can alter rural ways of life:
[If] due to the effects of climate change, there is a severe drought in some
villages or districts, people are forced to work in factories to earn a salary in order
to support their family in the rural areas.
They call for the government and donor organisations to offer support to the most
vulnerable populations:
Rural people are badly affected…the government and donors have to support
rural people first.
They perceive that most people in Cambodia do not understand the causes of the
problem, and lack the information and resources they need to cope with changes in
climate, due to a lack of both education and access to media. They explain that climate
change is particularly challenging for people living in poverty:
I think that rural people might not know about these issues because they are
unable to get the news. In addition, they do not prioritize these issues…They only
care about finding food to eat… poor farmers or uneducated farmers do not have
the capacity to adapt to climate change.
[We should not] destroy the forest. It is a very big issue. Forest is very important
for Cambodia…Another thing is energy consumption…Even though we have not
significantly contributed [to climate change], we still contribute when we burn
things; especially the electronics factories. They are not normal because they
consume a lot of fuel. And when they stop using those factories, the waste and
plastic will be burned.
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The question of gender inequality is more prominent in the NGO interviews than any
other group of key informants. Although most NGO representatives think that climate
change could affect everyone, they say that women will be more vulnerable to its effects
due to their responsibilities in relation to farming, domestic tasks and caring for children:
When climate change [comes], women are more at risk than men. They are
responsible for finding firewood, fish and meat, and farming near their houses.
Those resources will become rare.
If they do not have resources and capacity to adapt, then women will get strong
impacts. For example, when they experience drought, women have to farm with
their family. If they do not get a good yield, they skip meals to sacrifice to their
children and husband.
Most see a clear connection between climate change and development. NGO
representatives do not want Cambodia to exacerbate the problem of carbon emissions,
but recognise that the country needs to develop:
[We must] not allow developing countries to repeat the history of developed
countries and emit more carbon gas.
Most NGO representatives know something of the national action plan of adaptation
(NAPA) prepared by the Cambodian government, but they say that government activities
have not yet reached the local level:
There are many institutions working on [climate change]. But those activities are
happening only at mid- and national level. There is no activity at the regional,
provincial, and local levels.
They explain that any activity at the local level needs to begin with information provision
for local leaders:
Religious leaders
Religious leaders understand the changes in the weather much as village chiefs and
elders do, with similar variation in the way they understand the topic, and similar
misconceptions. Most refer to their own observations to explain the terms ‘climate
change’ and ‘global warming’, although religious teachings have also influenced their
perceptions of the issue. Yet many religious leaders express enthusiasm when asked
about the role that religion could play in communicating to the public on climate
change.
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Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Among religious leaders, as among village chiefs and elders, understanding of climate
change is mixed. Most refer to their own observations to explain the terms ‘climate
change’ and ‘global warming’, although religious teachings have also influenced their
perceptions of the issue. Most religious leaders say that there is a role for them to play in
communicating on climate change, although their comments indicate they need more
information if they are do to this successfully.
Although religious leaders perceive that human activities have caused the weather to
change, most - Buddhist monks and Muslim leaders alike - appear to share a notion of
divine, or natural, retribution. One Buddhist leader explains that nature is punishing
human beings for their wrong-doings:
Similarly, a Muslim leader says that the lack of rain and increase in temperature is God’s
punishment for human misdeeds:
[Humans]…do not love each other or help each other. Or they love only
themselves. They do not care about the animals and trees. They have violated
the trust God put in humans. He has allowed us to live together with animals and
plants. But humans have violated God’s trust. Therefore, God’s curse has come
to human lives in the form of climate change and global warming.
Some Buddhists also see a generational aspect to the retribution exacted by nature:
Several Buddhist monks explain that Buddhist teachings foresee changes such as the
ones Cambodians are currently observing. One refers to the Sermon of the Seven Suns:
There are stories in Buddhist teachings that the earth will be burnt one day, when
there will be seven suns.
Buddhist teachings lend a spiritual character to the monks’ approach to the question of
deforestation. One Buddhist monk is typical in saying that ‘[Buddha] prohibits Buddhist
monks and his followers from cutting trees’.
The Buddhist faith places high value on the environment because from the
beginning of his life until his death, Buddha preached under the trees…and found
a place to stay under the trees.
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Besides the influence of their faith, religious leaders understand the changes in the
weather much as village chiefs and elders do, with similar variation in the way they
understand the topic, and similar misconceptions.
Yet many religious leaders express enthusiasm when asked about the role that religious
belief and faith leaders could play in communicating to the public on climate change:
[Yes,] Buddhist monks! Monks could give sermons for climate mainstreaming if
the Ministry of Cult and Religion allowed us to address climate awareness. We
could tell people stories from Buddha’s time as well as discuss issues in the
present. We could do this if we were allowed to. I helped people to plant trees
that can protect them from strong sunlight [and] they follow what I said. Some
people plant trees at their house. Some have not cut trees in their rice fields.
Most religious leaders also see that schools and the media have a role to play in raising
awareness about climate change:
They first way to train people is public school, due to the fact that most young
people go to school. The second step is through radio and TV, because most
people have access to radio, even if they are poor.
One makes the point, though, that information on the issue needs to give people a clear
idea of what they can do to cope with the problems they face:
If you just teach and don’t find any strategies to prevent the problem, they won’t
benefit from joining in. It is necessary for us to provide [people] with solutions to
protect them.
Many religious leaders emphasise the needs of the most vulnerable people:
There are some families who are poor and don’t receive information on natural
disasters or climate change because they have no money to buy a radio.
I think most people who understand about the climate live in the city because
they are educated and get this information from the media... But people living in
rural areas haven’t been educated about this problem and don’t know about the
programmes of relevant ministries.
With the needs of poor and rural communities in mind, several religious leaders stress
that the government response to climate change needs to extend to communities at the
commune and village level:
The government includes district governors and provincial governors, and not
only the ministries. If we talk about government beneath the national level, it
includes commune leaders and village chiefs. They play a role in leading the
community. What I mean to say is that it requires participation from everybody
involved.
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Conclusions
Whether or not they fully understand the phenomenon, key informants are worried that
the changing climate is affecting their communities, and that people do not have
sufficient information to respond. From national government and media representatives,
to village chiefs and commune council leaders, key informants say that they want to
learn more about climate change and that they want to play a role in disseminating this
information to the Cambodian public.
Although key informants use few emotive terms in their explanations of what climate
change means to them, the overwhelming attitude is one of concern. With a few
exceptions – some scepticism among celebrities and media representatives, for instance
– key informants are clearly worried about the implications of climate change for the
Cambodian population.
As well as being concerned, however, many key informants are confused by the issue of
climate change. Key informants who are in many ways best placed to give information to
their communities – village chiefs, religious leaders, commune council leaders – say that
they are not sufficiently well-informed to communicate what is at stake.
All those charged with communicating on climate change will need support and
information so that they can provide a consistent, reliable message on climate change to
the Cambodian public.
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Recommendations
Most Cambodians receive information from TV, radio and word-of-mouth. This is
true of general information, and reflects where people hear climate change
terminology used, and where they receive information about extreme weather events.
Broadcast media are among the most highly trusted information sources. 91% of the
population have access to a mobile phone; 40% of people do not own the phone to
which they have access. More of the most vulnerable, including women and those
living in poverty, say they rely on their village chief for information.
Develop separate communication strategies for people who do not have access
to broadcast media.
Cambodians explain climate change with reference to its impacts rather than its
causes. Most have an experiential understanding of the phenomenon, but do not
understand the scientific basis for global climate change. Neither the causes of
global climate change nor the terminology used to describe the phenomenon are
well understood.
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Design radio phone-in shows for rural populations that bring
together farmers and those with relevant expertise to share their
experiences and develop solutions to widely expressed concerns.
o Explore and develop children’s programming to increase the role of
children as effective messengers to their friends and families.
Develop media and outreach formats aimed at children that will
allow them to learn about science through making things, solving
problems and applying basic science to challenges.
Focus on the highest profile perceptions and the more commonly experienced
problems and events for greatest resonance.
o Build upon the widespread understanding of the role trees play in weather
systems.
Employ media and outreach formats to explain the role of trees and
forests in Cambodia and around the world and use these formats as an
entry point to introduce people to the concept of global weather systems
and climate change.
Demonstrate the application of basic science knowledge to commonly
expressed concerns related to agriculture, health, disaster mitigation,
and water management.
Use the key areas of concern to ‘frame’ climate change coverage in
news stories and other programme formats.
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Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Build capacity within radio and TV organisations so that scheduled
broadcasts are interrupted in order for alert bulletins to be
announced.
Develop a universal symbol that can be used in weather forecasts
and as a mobile emoticon to communicate extreme weather
warnings through text messaging.
Develop a storm/flood warning template on all mobile phones in
Khmer.
Explore possibilities of mobile networks signing up to an industry-
wide mobile alert scheme, with a universal extreme weather
warning emoticon loaded on every phone and a network-wide alert
mechanism that allows messages to be communicated during an
emergency.
Identify ways of working with mobile networks to disseminate
weather information and/or early warning information. Explore
possibilities of isolating mobile users in specific areas of the
country for early warning information dissemination.
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Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Ensure that primary and secondary school curricula provide
children with the knowledge they need to read maps and interpret
the types of information and symbols used in weather forecasts.
People are uncertain whether the changes they have experienced in their weather
are long-term. 98% say that climate change is affecting their country now, but 22%
do not know whether climate change will affect the country in the future. Key
informants, particularly village chiefs, religious leaders and commune council leaders,
are perplexed by the topic of climate change. Their comments suggest that the same
is true of their communities. People’s observations of and suggestions for responding
to the changing weather are largely short- term; when they are asked about longer-
term measures, many don’t know what to do.
Put the message that climate change is a long-term problem at the centre of a
communications and media campaign.
Recognise that climate change science is a complex topic and make messages
simple and consistent to avoid exacerbating confusion among local leaders and
the general public.
Explain that climate change is a long-term phenomenon and emphasise the need
to find diverse, flexible responses. Centre climate change communication on
practical solutions that correspond to the needs of Cambodian people.
The three most important barriers to responding to the changes in weather are a lack
of money, lack of tools and a lack of information. More than half of respondents
say they do not have the information they need to respond. Key informants from
industry, NGOs and national government indicate that successful responses to
climate change in Cambodia are being developed and implemented. Few members of
the public have heard of these, however.
Raise the profile of current successful efforts with the general public.
Use information and communications to help people with financial priorities and
planning for longer term responses to climate change.
Use information and communications to help people to apply scientific knowledge
and develop new technologies and innovations to respond to key areas of
concern – agriculture, disasters, health, livelihoods, and water management.
o Use media formats and outreach to communicate agricultural research to
farmers.
o Use media to showcase successful efforts in Cambodia and elsewhere in
the world to respond to climate change. Develop media packages and
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devote parts of news and other programmes to showcasing innovations
and successful responses.
o Promote green technologies, inventions and responses developed by
Cambodians for Cambodians.
o Use media and communication to explore community-based credit and
saving schemes and micro-insurance and to inform people’s financial
decision-making.
Convene and broadcast community discussions in which
communities decide how to spend money on community
responses; in which they integrate climate change programming to
local infrastructure programmes, especially water management;
and in which women’s voices are represented.
o Develop a pool of spokespeople from across Cambodian society who can
be used by broadcast media to illustrate, describe and demonstrate
successful initiatives that could be applied to climate change responses.
o Develop and deliver standard training and basic media skills for these
spokespeople.
Cambodians look to the government, the Prime Minister and NGOs to provide
leadership in responding to their changing weather. Village chiefs, commune
council leaders and religious leaders are trusted sources of information and are
well-placed to inform their communities about the issue, yet the comments of key
informants suggest that they are not as well-informed about climate change as
representatives from national government. Provincial governors could play a key role,
as the provincial governors who participated in the research make the most diverse
range of connections between climate change and other aspects of society of all key
informants interviewed.
All media organisations should have a list of climate change experts – including
the government climate change press officers – who can “sense-check”
information before it goes to air.
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Bibliography
A fair share for women: Cambodia Gender Assessment, UNIFEM, WB, ADB, UNDP, DFID/UK,
2004, Phnom Penh, Cambodia
Blowing hot or cold?: South African attitudes to climate change, J. Seager, 2008, HSRC Review,
South Africa
Climate Change in the American Mind, A Leiserowitz et al, Centre for Climate Change
Communication, George Mason University, 2009
Climate Change Vulnerability Mapping for Southeast Asia, A.A.Yusuf & H. Francisco, EEPSEA,
2009, Singapore
National Strategic Development Plan, Royal Government of Cambodia, Phnom Penh, 2006
National Survey: Perception of climate change in Cambodia, Elizabeth Smith and Nop Polin,
Geres, 2007
People’s Recommendations on Climate Change via Radio Talk, Cambodian Centre for
Independent Media, 2009
The Perception of and Adaptation to Climate Change in Africa, David J Maddison, World Bank
Policy Research Working Paper no. 4038, 2007
Public perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia, Geres, for Danish Church Aid and Christian
Aid, Cambodia, 2009
The Contribution of Working Group II to the Fourth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate Change, M.L. Parry, O.F. Canziani, J.P. Palutikof, P.J. van der Linden and C.E.
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Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Hanson (eds), 2007, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, United Kingdom and New York,
NY, USA.
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Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Appendix 1: Methodology
Study Design
The study used a combination of qualitative and quantitative methods.
These key informants were recruited through a combination of purposive and snowball
sampling techniques, in consultation with the CCD, Oxfam & UNDP teams.
Appointments were fixed by telephone with those respondents who were available and
willing to speak to our interviewers about climate change.
Each interview was summarised in a short document on the day it was conducted. This
summary highlighted key findings as well as any methodological issues that arose.
Recordings of each discussion and interview were transcribed verbatim to Khmer. These
transcriptions were reviewed for accuracy and most were translated into English to allow
for review by the London-based research team.
Data Analysis
A coding frame was developed through a consultative process with the research team in
the UK and Cambodia. The coding frame was based on the research questions, and was
further extended through open coding of a selection of the transcripts. For each code,
the researchers worked together to produce a definition and a quote to illustrate the
code. The definitions and example quotes were added to the list of codes to produce a
final coding frame. The final coding frame was used by all of the researchers in the team.
The codes in the coding frame were uploaded to Atlas.ti software, which the researchers
then used to code and sort the in-depth interview transcripts. Coding relies on the
judgement of the individual researcher. The researcher reads through the transcript,
highlighting important sections of text and labelling them with one or more codes from
the coding frame. The inter-coder reliability score achieved by the research team was
0.74. This score was generated by comparing the results of each researcher working on
the coding and calculating the average number of times that the same code or different
codes had been used on a selected piece of text by the researchers.
Once the coding process had been completed for all transcripts, the software allowed
researchers to identify which themes were most prominent across the transcripts, and to
select and group together all the quotations relating to each research question, so that
they could be compared and analysed together. The interviews were analysed based on
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this Atlas coding, as well as general textual analysis. Once the coding was completed for
all transcripts, the researcher could select a code from a menu in Atlas, which generated
a list of quotations that had been highlighted for that particular code. The researchers
then read through these quotations and selected which quotations best illustrate the
code.
Target respondents for the survey were Cambodian men and women aged 15 – 55,
including people particularly vulnerable to the effects of climate change.
Because of the small numbers of respondents from coastal and fishing communities
included in the original sample, two booster samples were carried out to obtain samples
of 35 people from these groups. As this was a purposive sample rather than a random
sample, findings relating to the two fishing communities cannot be compared to the
findings for the entire sample, and are not nationally representative.
Sampling
Multi-stage sampling using Probability Proportional to Size (PPS) 48 was used to select
each primary sampling unit. Primary sampling units (PSU) were wards/villages. 2008
National Census data were used to select them.
Urban and rural respondents were sampled independently, with the number of rural and
urban start points based upon the proportions shown in the table of sampling.
By using two lists of all urban villages and all rural PSUs in the province, the total
cumulative population for each urban and rural location was calculated.
The cumulative population was divided by half of the number of start points in each
province using separate lists for urban and rural locations.
A random number between one and the sampling number was selected, using the Excel
random number function (RAND). The first cluster was the PSU in which this random
number lay. Subsequent start points were identified by adding the sampling interval to
the previous random number.
48
Probability Proportional to Size Sampling (PPS) is a sampling technique, commonly used in multistage cluster sampling,
in which the probability that a particular sampling unit will be selected in the sample is proportional to some known
variable (e.g., in a population survey, usually the population size of the sampling unit).
http://www.cdc.gov/cogh/dgphcd/modules/MiniModules/PPS/page09.htm. This method is less expensive and faster
than simple random sampling but still generates a sample that is representative of the total population.
49
Prey Veng, Siem Reap, Takeo, Kompong Speu, Banteay Meanchey and Kompong Thom and Phnom Penh.
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For the purposes of this study, a system was designed in which each PSU that was
randomly selected was paired with another randomly selected PSU in the same
commune, to gather as wide a range of participants as financial and logistical constraints
would allow. After the first PSU was randomly selected, the commune name was
checked. All of the remaining PSUs in that commune were then listed in order to
randomly select another PSU in the same area.
Table of Sampling
Number of Participants
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Stage 2 – Selecting Households in Each Ward/ Village
Systematic random sampling was used to select 10/12/13 households per PSU. 50
The sampling interval used to select households in a PSU was calculated by dividing the
total number of households in the PSU by the number of households (10/12/13) to be
selected. In each village, a map was drawn, in consultation with the local authorities or
village chief, to show the shape of the village. In urban wards, street maps were also
used. Interviewers began from a central starting point in the ward or village, with the
direction to travel varying for interviewers.
Quality Assurance
Supervisors were responsible for field supervision and quality throughout fieldwork,
including the piloting of the research instruments.
Quality assurance was achieved through observation, spot checks and group meetings
at the end of each working day. Supervisors conducted observations of selected
interviews; the purpose of observation was to evaluate and improve interviewer
performance and to look for errors and misinterpretation of questions that could not be
detected through editing.
The supervisor also oversaw field editing; every questionnaire was checked for
accuracy, completeness, eligibility and consistency while the team was in the field.
50
The number of households in the village was confirmed by local authorities and the village chief when the teams
reached the village, since sometimes the number of households in the lists is different from the actual number, due to
population movements. If there was a difference, the actual number provided by the village chief was used rather than the
number in the list.
51
Kish grid: a listing of all household members that is used for selecting a respondent from a household at random so that
the entire sample reflects the makeup of the general population in terms of age, gender, and family status.
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Spot checks were carried out by supervisors, who visited selected households to confirm
that the interview had been conducted and to assess the attitude of interviewers toward
household members and respondents.
Data Entry
Double data entry technique was done using Epi data and data was entered and
checked throughout the data collection process. The double data entry approach was
used to allow for comparison and validation.
On the questionnaires and during data entry, there was no information available that
would allow respondents to be identified, and ID numbers were used instead of
participant names on questionnaire scripts.
Data Analysis
Quantitative data analysis was done using SPSS software.
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interviewers interviewed male respondents, and female interviewers interviewed
females.
Each team was responsible for fieldwork in four provinces. Interviewers conducted
interviews; supervisors, who had fieldwork experience, managed the team’s work in the
field; and field editors ensured that all questionnaires were completed legibly and
accurately.
IV. Training
The fieldwork teams were briefed on the project and trained about the specifics of the
research by the BBC World Service Trust. The training objectives were:
to brief all fieldworkers about the aims and objectives of the research;
to introduce them to the key theoretical concepts being explored in the study;
to improve their knowledge of relevant methods and research ethics;
to provide skills-building practice sessions on interpersonal communication and
field practice, using discussions and interviews.
Fieldwork
Fieldwork and travel were planned to allow data collection teams to stay overnight in
some locations, in order to conduct discussions and family interviews at times during the
day or evening that were convenient to respondents, and in order to include respondents
who were away from home (for work or other reasons) during the day time.
Data Storage
All recordings, complete transcripts and survey questionnaires were stored on a secure
computer drive during data collection, data processing and analysis. Only people
responsible for data processing and analysis had access to these files. The files were
identified with codes. The date, province and profile of respondents were used to identify
files, but no information that would allow individual respondents to be identified was
stored with the data.
V. Research Ethics
The Trust was responsible for obtaining permissions and authorizations from local
authorities (e.g., police, district administrators) to operate in communities.
All interviewers and fieldwork team members were trained about ethical issues including
confidentiality and anonymity.
All selected respondents were informed about the study and asked for their consent to
participate in it. To obtain valid consent, the study used an introductory statement at the
start of the survey questionnaire to ask permission from interviewees and to reassure
them of the anonymity and confidentiality of the study. Respondents were able to skip
questions or withdraw from the study at any time.
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Appendix 2: List of Tables
Table 1: Socio-demographic profile
Base: All respondents
All Respondents
% #
Region
Phnom Penh 8.3 200
Plain 28.2 676
Tonle Sap 31.2 750
Coastal 12.5 300
Mountain 19.8 475
Ethnicity
Khm er 93.9 2254
Cham 2.0 47
Vietnam es e 0.1 3
Laotian 0.1 3
Chines e 0.0 1
Khm er Lao 0.2 4
Indigenous 3.7 89
Household Member
1-3 18.3 439
4-6 58.5 1404
7-Over 23.2 558
Age
15-24 32.8 787
25-34 29.7 712
35-44 20.6 495
45-55 17.0 407
Education
No Schooling 10.7 257
Primary School 41.1 988
Secondary School 28.4 682
High School 15.9 382
University 3.8 92
PPI Index
Poorest(0-24) 10.7 257
Poor(25-49) 39.2 942
Medium(50-74) 40.0 960
High(75-100) 10.1 242
Working Youth
No 79.2 1901
Yes 20.8 500
Landowner
No 12.5 300
Yes 87.5 2101
Occupation
Farmer 45.6 1096
Business person 16.2 390
Sales and services 4.4 105
Skilled Manual 4.0 96
Housework/housewife 5.9 142
Teacher 1.9 46
University Student 1.8 44
Non-university student 10.4 250
Professional-technical-management 3.7 90
Government official 3.9 93
Forestry Worker 0.2 5
Coastal fisherman/woman 1.5 35
Freshwater fisherman/woman 1.5 35
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Table 2: Socio-demographic profile by gender and residence
Base: All respondents
Sex Residence
Base Male Female Urban Rural
% # % # % # % #
All Respondents 2401 50.1 1203 49.9 1198 34.2 820 65.8 1581
Region(*)
Phnom Penh 200 50.0 100 50.0 100 50.0 100 50.0 100 X 2 =37.07
Plain 676 50.6 342 49.4 334 37.0 250 63.0 426 df=4, p=0.000
Tonle Sap 750 49.2 369 50.8 381 33.3 250 66.7 500
Coastal 300 50.7 152 49.3 148 26.7 80 73.3 220
Mountain 475 50.5 240 49.5 235 29.5 140 70.5 335
Ethnicity
Khmer 2254 50.4 1136 49.6 1118 35.7 805 64.3 1449
Cham 47 48.9 23 51.1 24 19.1 9 80.9 38
Vietnamese 3 33.3 1 66.7 2 100.0 3 0.0 0
Laotian 3 0.0 0 100.0 3 33.3 1 66.7 2
Chinese 1 0.0 0 100.0 1 0.0 0 100.0 1
Khmer Lao 4 25.0 1 75.0 3 25.0 1 75.0 3
Indigenous 89 47.2 42 52.8 47 1.1 1 98.9 88
Household Member
1-3 439 46.5 204 53.5 235 32.3 142 67.7 297
4-6 1404 51.9 728 48.1 676 33.2 466 66.8 938
7-Over 558 48.6 271 51.4 287 38.0 212 62.0 346
Age(*)
15-24 787 47.8 376 52.2 411 38.9 306 61.1 481 X 2 =11.73
25-34 712 51.0 363 49.0 349 31.7 226 68.3 486 df=3, p=0.008
35-44 495 49.1 243 50.9 252 32.3 160 67.7 335
45-55 407 54.3 221 45.7 186 31.4 128 68.6 279
Education(*)
No Schooling 257 39.7 102 60.3 155 18.7 48 81.3 209 X 2 =65.12
Primary School 988 43.5 430 56.5 558 23.0 227 77.0 761 df=4, p=0.000
Secondary School 682 55.3 377 44.7 305 36.8 251 63.2 431 X 2 =261.51
High School 382 60.2 230 39.8 152 58.1 222 41.9 160 df=4, p=0.000
University 92 69.6 64 30.4 28 78.3 72 21.7 20
PPI Index(*)
Poorest(0-24) 257 50.6 130 49.4 127 11.3 29 88.7 228 X 2 =344.88
Poor(25-49) 942 52.4 494 47.6 448 20.0 188 80.0 754 df=3, p=0.000
Medium(50-74) 960 48.3 464 51.7 496 44.7 429 55.3 531
High(75-100) 242 47.5 115 52.5 127 71.9 174 28.1 68
Working Youth(*)
No 1901 51.8 985 48.2 916 36.0 684 64.0 1217 X 2 =10.67 X 2 =13.57
Yes 500 43.6 218 56.4 282 27.2 136 72.8 364 df=1, p=0.001 df=1, p=0.000
Landowner(*)
No 300 50.7 152 49.3 148 39.7 119 60.3 181 X 2 =4.64
Yes 2101 50.0 1051 50.0 1050 33.4 701 66.6 1400 df=1, p=0.031
Occupation(*)
Farmer 1096 53.9 591 46.1 505 12.0 132 88.0 964 X 2 =212.11
Business person 390 35.9 140 64.1 250 45.9 179 54.1 211 df=12, p=0.000
Sales and services 105 61.0 64 39.0 41 50.5 53 49.5 52 X 2 =515.73
Skilled Manual 96 59.4 57 40.6 39 49.0 47 51.0 49 df=12, p=0.000
Housework/housewife 142 3.5 5 96.5 137 59.2 84 40.8 58
Teacher 46 54.3 25 45.7 21 65.2 30 34.8 16
University Student 44 68.2 30 31.8 14 72.7 32 27.3 12
Non-university student 250 54.0 135 46.0 115 57.2 143 42.8 107
Professional-technical-management 90 60.0 54 40.0 36 67.8 61 32.2 29
Government official 93 77.4 72 22.6 21 54.8 51 45.2 42
Forestry Worker 5 60.0 3 40.0 2 0.0 0 100.0 5
Coastal fisherman/woman 35 54.3 19 45.7 16 8.6 3 91.4 32
Freshwater fisherman/woman 35 65.7 23 34.3 12 14.3 5 85.7 30
Note:
A star (*) reports a significant relation betw een a demographic variable and dependent variable at 5% significance level.
Figures in bold represent cells w ith high positive, w hile those in bold italic represent high negative relation betw een both variables
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Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Table 3: Extreme weather events in the past year (Frequency Table)
Base: All respondents
Items % #
Very heavy rain 60.5 1452
Pest on agricultural production 52.2 1253
Very high temperatures 44.0 1056
Drought 41.1 986
Storm, Cyclone, Tonado 37.0 887
Flood 36.6 879
Very cold temperatures 30.2 725
Wildfire 17.0 408
No such event experienced in past year 6.6 158
Coastal storm surge 5.0 119
Landslide 1.5 36
Thunder 0.2 4
Base 2401
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Table 4: “Thinking about the past year, please tell me whether you have experienced one or more of the following extreme weather events”
Base: All respondents
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Table 5: “Which of these events had the most serious impact on your life?”
Base: Those who experienced an extreme weather event in the past year
Which of these events had the most serious impact on your life?
Pest on Storm,
Very high Very heavy
agricultural Drought Cyclone, Flood
Base temperatures rain
production Tornado
% # % # % # % # % # % #
All Respondents 2243 24.8 556 21.8 488 15.7 352 11.1 249 11.8 264 10.1 226
Sex
Male 1184 25.8 306 25.3 300 19.1 226 8.6 102 10.4 123 6.6 78
Female 1059 23.6 250 17.8 188 11.9 126 13.9 147 13.3 141 14.0 148
Residence
Urban 750 14.7 110 19.2 144 21.2 159 13.2 99 13.5 101 13.5 101
Rural 1493 29.9 446 23.0 344 12.9 193 10.0 150 10.9 163 8.4 125
Region
Phnom Penh 177 10.7 19 22.0 39 37.9 67 6.2 11 6.8 12 14.1 25
Plain 607 31.3 190 26.5 161 17.3 105 12.0 73 3.1 19 6.6 40
Tonle Sap 711 18.1 129 28.8 205 16.9 120 10.4 74 13.8 98 6.6 47
Coastal 286 36.0 103 9.4 27 4.9 14 17.5 50 16.1 46 6.3 18
Mountain 462 24.9 115 12.1 56 10.0 46 8.9 41 19.3 89 20.8 96
Ethnicity (*)
Khmer 2100 25.1 528 22.2 466 16.1 338 11.3 237 11.2 236 9.3 195 x 2 =59.79
Indigenous people 89 24.7 22 9.0 8 10.1 9 6.7 6 16.9 15 25.8 23 df=20
Cham 44 11.4 5 29.5 13 9.1 4 11.4 5 25.0 11 9.1 4 P=0.000
Household Member
1-3 407 20.6 84 21.9 89 18.4 75 10.8 44 12.8 52 10.8 44
4-6 1317 26.4 348 21.6 284 15.9 209 11.2 147 10.9 144 9.3 123
7-Over 519 23.9 124 22.2 115 13.1 68 11.2 58 13.1 68 11.4 59
Age
15-24 748 22.5 168 18.2 136 18.0 135 12.2 91 11.9 89 13.1 98
25-34 659 24.7 163 23.1 152 16.7 110 10.0 66 12.0 79 8.8 58
35-44 461 25.2 116 24.3 112 13.0 60 11.1 51 12.1 56 8.7 40
45-55 375 29.1 109 23.5 88 12.5 47 10.9 41 10.7 40 8.0 30
Education
No Schooling 243 29.6 72 16.0 39 9.5 23 9.5 23 12.8 31 12.8 31
Primary School 917 27.5 252 23.1 212 13.2 121 11.1 102 11.9 109 7.9 72
Secondary School 639 25.7 164 21.1 135 16.3 104 11.0 70 11.1 71 11.6 74
High School 358 17.0 61 22.1 79 22.3 80 10.9 39 12.6 45 11.7 42
University 86 8.1 7 26.7 23 27.9 24 17.4 15 9.3 8 8.1 7
PPI Index
Poorest (0-24) 249 27.3 68 18.5 46 8.4 21 8.8 22 19.3 48 10.0 25
Poor (25-49) 895 30.9 277 22.6 202 12.0 107 10.1 90 12.1 108 7.9 71
Medium (50-74) 883 21.7 192 23.8 210 18.8 166 12.2 108 8.9 79 10.2 90
High (75-100) 216 8.8 19 13.9 30 26.9 58 13.4 29 13.4 29 18.5 40
Working Youth
No 1773 24.4 432 22.8 404 15.8 280 11.1 197 12.0 212 9.1 162
Yes 470 26.4 124 17.9 84 15.3 72 11.1 52 11.1 52 13.6 64
Landowner
No 273 12.5 34 22.3 61 23.1 63 12.5 34 8.1 22 15.8 43
Yes 1970 26.5 522 21.7 427 14.7 289 10.9 215 12.3 242 9.3 183
Occupation
Farmer 1040 36.5 380 24.5 255 9.6 100 8.0 83 11.4 119 6.5 68
Business person 342 15.2 52 20.8 71 17.3 59 12.6 43 12.3 42 16.4 56
Sales and services 94 11.7 11 21.3 20 33.0 31 8.5 8 11.7 11 10.6 10
Skilled Manual 93 17.2 16 23.7 22 24.7 23 11.8 11 8.6 8 8.6 8
Housework/housewife 118 10.2 12 11.9 14 12.7 15 20.3 24 14.4 17 21.2 25
Teacher 42 19.0 8 21.4 9 23.8 10 16.7 7 7.1 3 7.1 3
University Student 41 7.3 3 26.8 11 17.1 7 19.5 8 12.2 5 12.2 5
Non-university student 243 16.5 40 18.1 44 24.3 59 12.8 31 13.6 33 11.9 29
Professional-technical-management 83 10.8 9 15.7 13 28.9 24 12.0 10 9.6 8 16.9 14
Government official 91 13.2 12 26.4 24 24.2 22 17.6 16 9.9 9 6.6 6
Forestry Worker 4 0.0 0 25.0 1 0.0 0 0.0 0 50.0 2 25.0 1
Coastal fisherman/woman 35 14.3 5 0.0 0 0.0 0 11.4 4 14.3 5 8.6 3
Freshwater fisherman/woman 35 14.3 5 11.4 4 5.7 2 34.3 12 11.4 4 2.9 1
Note:
A star (*) reports a significant relation betw een a demographic variable and dependent variable at 5% significance level.
Figures in bold represent cells w ith high positive, w hile those in bold italic represent high negative relation betw een both variables
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Table 6: Did you receive any information about the event you mentioned?
Base: Respondents who experienced an extreme weather event in the past year
Did you receive any information about the event you mentioned?
Base No Yes Don't Know
% # % # % #
All Respondents 2242 35.8 802 63.2 1417 1.0 23
Sex(*)
Male 1184 33.0 391 66.3 785 0.7 8 x 2 =12.10
Female 1058 38.8 411 59.7 632 1.4 15 df=2,P=0.002
Residence(*)
Urban 749 27.9 209 71.3 534 0.8 6 x 2 =31.67
Rural 1493 39.7 593 59.1 883 1.1 17 df=2,P=0.000
Region(*)
Phnom Penh 176 31.8 56 68.2 120 0.0 0 x 2 =44.58
Plain 607 42.7 259 56.3 342 1.0 6 df=8
Tonle Sap 711 35.0 249 63.4 451 1.5 11 P=0.000
Coastal 286 22.0 63 77.6 222 0.3 1
Mountain 462 37.9 175 61.0 282 1.1 5
Ethnicity(*)
Khmer 2099 34.7 729 64.2 1348 1.0 22 x 2 =21.61
Indigenous people 89 58.4 52 40.4 36 1.1 1 df=4
Cham 44 34.1 15 65.9 29 0.0 0 P=0.000
Household Member
1-3 407 33.4 136 66.3 270 0.2 1
4-6 1316 36.6 482 62.1 817 1.3 17
7-Over 519 35.5 184 63.6 330 1.0 5
Age(*)
15-24 748 30.9 231 68.3 511 0.8 6 x 2 =15.94
25-34 658 37.5 247 61.7 406 0.8 5 df=6
35-44 461 40.3 186 58.4 269 1.3 6 P=0.014
45-55 375 36.8 138 61.6 231 1.6 6
Education(*)
No Schooling 243 55.6 135 43.2 105 1.2 3 x 2 =120.88
Primary School 917 41.9 384 56.8 521 1.3 12 df=8
Secondary School 638 30.1 192 68.8 439 1.1 7 P=0.000
High School 358 22.6 81 77.1 276 0.3 1
University 86 11.6 10 88.4 76 0.0 0
PPI Index(*)
Poorest (0-24) 249 47.8 119 51.0 127 1.2 3 x 2 =57.77
Poor (25-49) 895 41.0 367 57.7 516 1.3 12 df=6
Medium (50-74) 883 30.2 267 69.0 609 0.8 7 P=0.000
High (75-100) 215 22.8 49 76.7 165 0.5 1
Working Youth
No 1772 35.7 632 63.4 1123 1.0 17
Yes 470 36.2 170 62.6 294 1.3 6
Landowner
No 273 37.4 102 61.5 168 1.1 3
Yes 1969 35.6 700 63.4 1249 1.0 20
Occupation
Farmer 1042 44.4 463 54.5 568 1.1 11
Business person 346 34.7 120 64.2 222 1.2 4
Sales and services 94 34.0 32 66.0 62 0.0 0
Skilled Manual 93 39.8 37 60.2 56 0.0 0
Housework/housewife 118 27.1 32 70.3 83 2.5 3
Teacher 42 7.1 3 92.9 39 0.0 0
University Student 41 12.2 5 87.8 36 0.0 0
Non-university student 244 23.4 57 76.6 187 0.0 0
Professional-technical-management 83 27.7 23 69.9 58 2.4 2
Government official 91 15.4 14 83.5 76 1.1 1
Forestry Worker 4 25.0 1 75.0 3 0.0 0
Coastal fisherman/woman 35 37.1 13 62.9 22 0.0 0
Freshwater fisherman/woman 35 34.3 12 60.0 21 5.7 2
Note:
A star (*) reports a significant relation betw een a demographic variable and dependent variable at 5% significance level.
Figures in bold represent cells w ith high positive, w hile those in bol d itali c represent high negative relation betw een both variables
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Table 7: In general, do you ever get information from the weather report?
Base: Respondents who received information about the extreme weather event they mentioned
102
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Table 8: When did you hear about the event?
Base: Respondents who received information about the extreme weather event they mentioned
103
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Table 9: Source of information on extreme weather event (Frequency Table)
Base: Respondents who received information about the extreme weather event they mentioned
Items % #
TV 58.7 831
Radio
51.9 734
Neighbour
36.8 521
Family member
13.4 189
Friend
11.9 168
Myself
10.1 143
Newspaper 8.3 118
Authorities 7.8 110
School 3.3 47
Weather report 3.0 42
Others 1.5 21
Base
1415
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Table 10: Where did you get this information from?
Base: Respondents who received information about the extreme weather event they mentioned
Where did you get this information from?
Family
TV Radio Neighbour Friend Myselft Newspaper Authorities
Base Member
% # % # % # % # % # % # % # % #
All Respondents 1415 58.7 831 51.9 734 36.8 521 13.4 189 11.9 168 10.1 143 8.3 118 7.8 110
Sex(*)
Male 783 61.6 482 57.7 452 33.3 261 11.3 89 15.7 123 12.6 99 9.7 76 8.3 65 x 2 =24.655 x 2 =9.160 x 2 =5.793 x 2 =24.064 x 2 =6.093 x 2 =4.227 x 2 =12.427
Female 632 55.2 349 44.6 282 41.1 260 15.8 100 7.1 45 7.0 44 6.6 42 7.1 45 df=1,P=0.000 df=1,P=0.002 df=1,P=0.016 df=1,P=0.000 df=1,P=0.014 df=1,P=0.040 df=1,P=0.040
Residence(*)
Urban 534 75.1 401 47.9 256 27.5 147 11.2 60 14.4 77 8.1 43 13.7 73 4.5 24 x 2 =5.316 x 2 =31.831 x 2 =94.774 x 2 =5.313 x 2 =32.045 x 2 =12.786 x 2 =3.981
Rural 881 48.8 430 54.3 478 42.5 374 14.6 129 10.3 91 11.4 100 5.1 45 9.7 86 df=1,P=0.021 df=1,P=0.000 df=1,P=0.000 df=1,P=0.021 df=1,P=0.000 df=1,P=0.000 df=1,P=0.046
Region(*)
Phnom Penh 119 83.2 99 47.1 56 26.1 31 7.5 9 8.4 10 0.8 1 18.3 22 2.5 3 x 2 =24.553 x 2 =54.447 x 2 =16.474 x 2 =43.524 x 2 =25.707 x 2 =53.093
Plain 342 67.3 230 56.4 193 35.4 121 9.9 34 12.0 41 2.3 8 12.6 43 8.8 30 df=4 df=4 df=4 df=4 df=4 df=4
Tonle Sap 450 53.1 239 50.4 227 32.4 146 13.1 59 9.8 44 15.6 70 3.8 17 4.7 21 P=0.000 P=0.000 P=0.002 P=0.000 P=0.000 P=0.000
Coastal 222 52.7 117 46.4 103 48.2 107 14.4 32 12.6 28 14.0 31 3.6 8 7.7 17
Mountain 282 51.8 146 55.0 155 41.1 116 19.5 55 16.0 45 11.7 33 9.9 28 13.8 39
Ethnicity(*)
Khmer 1346 60.2 810 51.6 694 36.5 491 13.5 182 43.7 588 10.0 135 9.3 125 7.1 96 x 2 =28.76 x 2 =43.78
Indigenous people 36 16.7 6 66.7 24 41.7 15 16.7 6 44.4 16 8.3 3 0.0 0 36.1 13 df=2 df=2
Cham 29 48.3 14 48.3 14 44.8 13 0.0 0 48.3 14 17.2 5 3.4 1 0.0 0 P=0.000 P=0.000
Household Member(*)
1-3 270 52.6 142 58.5 158 42.2 114 13.3 36 48.5 131 7.4 20 9.3 25 5.2 14 x 2 =15.33
4-6 816 60.3 492 47.4 387 35.8 292 13.5 110 43.3 353 10.6 87 9.1 74 8.3 68 df=2
7-Over 329 59.9 197 57.4 189 35.0 115 13.1 43 41.3 136 10.9 36 8.5 28 8.5 28 P=0.000
Age(*)
15-24 511 61.4 314 55.0 281 34.2 175 15.1 77 16.4 84 9.8 50 10.6 54 7.6 39 x 2 =38.160 x 2 =34.381 x 2 =96.083 x 2 =122.138 x 2 =13.144
25-34 405 56.8 230 47.7 193 41.7 169 12.3 50 13.6 55 11.4 46 9.4 38 7.4 30 df=4 df=4 df=4 df=4 df=4
35-44 269 57.2 154 50.9 137 36.8 99 14.5 39 6.3 17 10.8 29 7.1 19 7.4 20 P=0.000 P=0.000 P=0.000 P=0.000 P=0.11
45-55 230 57.8 133 53.5 123 33.9 78 10.0 23 5.2 12 7.8 18 3.0 7 9.1 21
Education(*)
No Schooling 104 34.6 36 45.2 47 49.0 51 14.3 15 6.7 7 9.6 10 0.0 0 16.2 17 x 2 =17.924 x 2 =113.572 x 2 =96.083 x 2 =46.76 x 2 =23.217 x 2 =16.455
Primary School 521 48.9 255 51.2 267 41.3 215 14.4 75 6.9 36 11.1 58 2.5 13 8.1 42 df=3 df=3 df=4 df=3 df=3 df=3
Secondary School 438 61.9 271 50.7 222 37.7 165 14.1 62 12.3 54 11.6 51 7.1 31 6.6 29 P=0.000 P=0.000 P=0.000 P=0.000 P=0.000 P=0.001
High School 276 73.9 204 55.1 152 28.3 78 11.2 31 20.3 56 6.9 19 18.1 50 6.9 19
University 76 85.5 65 60.5 46 15.8 12 7.9 6 19.7 15 6.6 5 31.6 24 3.9 3
PPI Index(*)
Poorest (0-24) 127 30.7 39 53.5 68 47.2 60 13.4 17 8.7 11 7.9 10 2.4 3 17.3 22 x 2 =7.561 x 2 =6.070
Poor (25-49) 515 48.3 249 53.6 276 39.4 203 15.3 79 10.1 52 14.0 72 3.9 20 8.7 45 df=1 df=1
Medium (50-74) 608 67.8 412 51.2 311 35.7 217 11.3 69 12.7 77 8.9 54 10.5 64 6.1 37 P=0.006 P=0.014
High (75-100) 165 79.4 131 47.9 79 24.8 41 14.5 24 17.0 28 4.2 7 18.8 31 3.6 6
Working Youth(*)
No 1121 60.6 679 51.7 579 35.8 401 12.2 137 12.0 135 10.0 112 9.0 101 7.5 84 x 2 =7.561 x 2 =6.070
Yes 294 51.7 152 52.7 155 40.8 120 17.7 52 11.2 33 10.5 31 5.8 17 8.8 26 df=1,P=0.006 df=1,P=0.014
Landowner(*)
No 168 55.4 93 41.7 70 39.3 66 11.9 20 15.5 26 11.3 19 10.1 17 6.0 10 x 2 =7.954
Yes 1247 59.2 738 53.2 664 36.5 455 13.5 169 11.4 142 9.9 124 8.1 101 8.0 100 df=1,P=0.005
Occupation(*)
Farmer 567 44.6 253 55.0 312 40.7 231 14.4 82 7.6 43 13.9 79 3.2 18 10.6 60 x 2 =41.114 x 2 =102.309 x 2 =30.584
Business person 222 63.5 141 40.5 90 42.3 94 16.2 36 9.9 22 8.6 19 7.7 17 5.0 11 df=12 df=12 df=12
Sales and services 61 73.8 45 54.1 33 37.7 23 9.7 6 11.5 7 8.2 5 16.1 10 4.8 3 P=0.000 P=0.000 P=0.000
Skilled Manual 56 67.9 38 51.8 29 37.5 21 14.3 8 17.9 10 12.5 7 7.1 4 7.1 4
Housework/housewife 83 61.4 51 36.1 30 41.0 34 12.0 10 2.4 2 1.2 1 4.8 4 4.8 4
Teacher 39 69.2 27 56.4 22 38.5 15 15.4 6 12.8 5 2.6 1 23.1 9 7.7 3
University Student 36 86.1 31 66.7 24 11.1 4 11.1 4 16.7 6 5.6 2 30.6 11 5.6 2
Non-university student 187 72.7 136 56.1 105 27.8 52 11.8 22 24.6 46 9.1 17 14.4 27 5.9 11
Professional-technical-management 58 70.7 41 51.7 30 25.9 15 13.8 8 19.0 11 6.9 4 13.8 8 3.4 2
Government official 76 73.7 56 57.9 44 21.1 16 7.9 6 15.8 12 5.3 4 11.8 9 13.2 10
Forestry Worker 3 33.3 1 66.7 2 100.0 3 0.0 0 33.3 1 33.3 1 0.0 0 0.0 0
Coastal fisherman/woman 22 36.4 8 36.4 8 45.5 10 9.1 2 9.1 2 4.5 1 0.0 0 0.0 0
Freshwater fisherman/woman 21 42.9 9 57.1 12 38.1 8 4.8 1 4.8 1 14.3 3 4.8 1 0.0 0
Note:
A star (*) reports a signif icant relation betw een a demographic variable and dependent variable at 5% signif icance level.
Figures in bold represent cells w ith high positive, w hile those in bold i ta li c represent high negative relation betw een both variables
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Table 11: How would information have helped you to prepare for such an event? (Frequency
Table)
Base: Respondents who receive information about the extreme weather event they mentioned
Items % #
Prepare materials 51.6 717
Help each other to prepare for events 45.6 634
Buy pesticide 21.1 293
Move to place of safety 20.2 281
Prepare sufficient food 20.2 281
Plant more trees 8.9 124
Store water 7.1 98
Construct irrigation system 4.2 59
Technical treatment 3.4 47
Healthcare 0.9 13
Base (missing 28) 1389
Table 12: Thinking about your entire life, which of the following are true?
Base: All respondents
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Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Table 13: Thinking about your entire life, which of the following are true? (Part I)
Base: All respondents
Think that the event bellow is true within their entire life
Temperature Seasons start
has Less intense Rains are less and finish at a Drought is
Base
increased/got Less rain rain predictable different time more frequent More rain
% # % # % # % # % # % # % #
All Respondents 2401 98.7 2369 91.7 2201 90.8 2179 84.6 2032 83.0 1993 66.7 1601 66.2 1589
Sex (*)
Male 1203 98.9 1190 92.2 1109 91.4 1100 81.5 981 81.9 985 72.6 873 62.5 752 x 2 =25.82 x 2 =39.17 x 2 =20.44 x 2 =20.118 x 2 =35.49
Female 1198 98.4 1179 91.2 1092 90.1 1079 87.7 1051 84.1 1008 60.8 728 69.9 837 df=2,P=0.00 df=2,P=0.000 df=2,P=0.000 df=2,P=0.000 df=2,P=0.000
Residence (*)
Urban 820 99.3 814 88.9 729 89.8 736 86.5 709 84.4 692 59.3 486 65.2 535 x 2 =30.89 x 2 =46.13 x 2 =9.50
Rural 1581 98.4 1555 93.1 1472 91.3 1443 83.7 1323 82.3 1301 70.5 1115 66.7 1054 df=2,P=0.00 df=2,P=0.000 df=2,P=0.009
Region (*)
Phnom Penh 200 99.5 199 94.0 188 94.5 189 97.0 194 89.5 179 60.0 120 69.0 138 x 2 =82.25 x 2 =62.77 x 2 =54.31
Plain 676 99.4 672 92.0 622 89.5 605 86.8 587 86.5 585 72.9 493 52.8 357 df=8 df=8 df=8
Tonle Sap 750 98.9 742 92.4 693 91.7 688 83.2 624 84.1 631 70.9 532 64.7 485 P=0.000 P=0.000 P=0.000
Coastal 300 98.3 295 89.0 267 85.7 257 83.3 250 75.0 225 64.7 194 69.0 207
Mountain 475 97.1 461 90.7 431 92.6 440 79.4 377 78.5 373 55.2 262 84.6 402
Ethnicity (*)
Khmer 2253 98.9 2228 92.3 2074 91.4 2051 88.9 1926 86.7 1885 67.7 1515 65.7 1469 X 2 =6.02 X 2 =6.67 X 2 =6.06
Indigenous people 89 94.4 84 85.4 76 88.6 78 80.3 57 80.0 60 55.8 48 89.9 80 df=2 df=2 df=2
Cham 47 97.9 46 89.1 41 85.1 40 82.6 38 80.4 37 68.1 32 63.8 30 p=0.045 p=0.036 p=0.048
Household Member (*)
1-3 439 98.9 434 94.0 410 90.8 397 87.9 369 86.6 367 66.7 291 65.1 284 X 2 =6.26 X 2 =9.26 X 2 =6.73
4-6 1403 99.1 1390 91.1 1275 91.1 1273 88.8 1194 86.6 1166 66.4 924 66.0 918 df=2, p=0.04df=2, p=0.010 df=2, p=0.035
7-Over 558 97.7 545 92.5 516 91.4 509 88.7 469 85.7 460 69.7 386 69.6 387
Age
15-24 787 98.5 775 89.7 706 89.6 705 84.9 668 81.7 643 60.1 473 67.9 534
25-34 712 99.0 705 93.7 667 91.0 648 86.1 613 84.4 601 68.0 484 67.8 483
35-44 495 99.2 491 93.3 462 92.7 459 85.7 424 85.1 421 71.7 355 64.4 319
45-55 407 97.8 398 89.9 366 90.2 367 80.3 327 80.6 328 71.0 289 62.2 253
Education
No Schooling 257 98.8 254 94.2 242 89.9 231 81.7 210 80.5 207 66.5 171 72.8 187
Primary School 988 98.5 973 94.1 930 92.1 910 82.8 818 82.4 814 70.5 697 67.8 670
Secondary School 682 98.8 674 88.9 606 89.1 608 85.0 580 82.1 560 64.2 438 64.4 439
High School 382 98.7 377 89.0 340 90.3 345 88.5 338 84.6 323 60.7 232 65.4 250
University 92 98.9 91 90.2 83 92.4 85 93.5 86 96.7 89 68.5 63 46.7 43
PPI Index
Poorest (0-24) 257 96.9 249 91.4 235 93.4 240 76.3 196 77.0 198 69.3 178 80.9 208
Poor (25-49) 942 98.7 930 94.3 888 91.1 858 83.8 789 80.7 760 69.9 658 63.7 600
Medium (50-74) 960 99.3 953 90.8 872 90.3 867 87.0 835 85.5 821 66.0 634 65.4 628
High (75-100) 242 97.9 237 85.1 206 88.4 214 87.6 212 88.4 214 54.1 131 63.2 153
Working Youth
No 1901 98.8 1878 92.0 1748 90.8 1727 84.8 1612 83.5 1587 67.4 1282 65.8 1251
Yes 500 98.2 491 90.6 453 90.4 452 84.0 420 81.2 406 63.8 319 67.6 338
Landowner
No 300 99.0 297 90.3 271 90.7 272 80.3 241 79.7 239 63.7 191 68.7 206
Yes 2101 98.6 2072 91.9 1930 90.8 1907 85.2 1791 83.5 1754 67.1 1410 65.8 1383
Occupation
Farmer 1096 98.3 1077 93.3 1023 91.9 1007 82.8 907 81.8 897 74.1 812 65.6 719
Business person 390 98.5 384 89.7 350 92.6 361 89.5 349 85.6 334 61.5 240 66.9 261
Sales and services 105 100.0 105 89.5 94 92.4 97 86.7 91 88.6 93 69.5 73 63.8 67
Skilled Manual 96 100.0 96 93.8 90 88.5 85 84.4 81 80.2 77 64.6 62 65.6 63
Housework/housewife 142 98.6 140 93.0 132 85.9 122 88.0 125 83.8 119 45.8 65 73.2 104
Teacher 46 100.0 46 93.5 43 87.0 40 89.1 41 89.1 41 80.4 37 47.8 22
University Student 44 97.7 43 86.4 38 86.4 38 93.2 41 90.9 40 65.9 29 52.3 23
Non-university student 250 99.2 248 88.8 222 88.8 222 85.6 214 81.6 204 52.8 132 70.4 176
Professional-technical-management 90 98.9 89 90.0 81 88.9 80 81.1 73 84.4 76 60.0 54 66.7 60
Government official 93 98.9 92 88.2 82 87.1 81 81.7 76 81.7 76 67.7 63 53.8 50
Forestry Worker 5 100.0 5 80.0 4 100.0 5 60.0 3 80.0 4 80.0 4 100.0 5
Coastal fisherman/woman 35 100.0 35 94.3 33 94.3 33 82.9 29 82.9 29 74.3 26 85.7 30
Freshwater fisherman/woman 35 100.0 35 91.4 32 94.3 33 74.3 26 74.3 26 65.7 23 97.1 34
Note:
A star (*) reports a significant relation betw een a demographic variable and dependent variable at 5% significance level.
Figures in bold represent cells w ith high positive, w hile those in bold italic represent high negative relation betw een both variables
107
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Table 14: Thinking about your entire life, which of the following are true? (Part II)
Base: All respondents
Think that the event bellow is true within their entire life
Seasons are More intense Drought is More Flooding is Temperature has Flooding is
Base less predictable rain more intense windstorms more intense decreased/got colder more frequent
% # % # % # % # % # % # % #
All Respondents 2401 65.2 1565 64.8 1556 60.1 1442 45.9 1103 44.2 1062 41.3 992 35.1 842
Sex (*)
Male 1203 69.6 835 59.0 710 58.4 703 47.5 571 42.8 515 36.4 438 39.3 472 x 2 =17.74 x 2 =20.64 x 2 =14.81 x 2 =7.76 x 2 =31.63
Female 1198 61.1 730 70.6 846 61.7 739 44.5 532 45.7 547 46.2 554 30.9 370 df=2,P=0.000 df=2,P=0.000 df=2,P=0.001 df=2,P=0.021 df=2,P=0.000
Residence (*)
Urban 820 64.4 528 64.9 532 51.2 420 44.9 368 47.0 385 41.7 342 34.8 285 x 2 =12.73 x 2 =23.63 x 2 =10.55 x 2 =14.85
Rural 1581 65.8 1037 64.8 1024 64.6 1022 46.6 735 42.8 677 41.1 650 35.2 557 df=2,P=0.002 df=2,P=0.000 df=2,P=0.005 df=2,P=0.000
Region (*)
Phnom Penh 200 72.5 145 73.0 146 45.5 91 51.5 103 41.0 82 45.0 90 36.0 72 x 2 =59.56 x 2 =49.07 x 2 =278.20 x 2 =326.88 x 2 =386.61
Plain 676 72.2 488 54.9 371 64.3 435 48.9 330 42.8 289 29.7 201 33.5 226 df=8 df=8 df=8 df=8 df=8
Tonle Sap 750 63.8 477 62.4 468 67.7 508 46.9 351 51.5 386 40.8 306 37.7 283 P=0.000 P=0.000 P=0.000 P=0.000 P=0.000
Coastal 300 60.8 180 64.7 194 64.3 193 53.3 160 36.0 108 47.3 142 32.7 98
Mountain 475 57.9 275 79.4 377 45.3 215 33.5 159 41.5 197 53.3 253 34.3 163
Ethnicity (*)
Khmer 2253 72.8 1490 64.7 1445 60.5 1357 47.3 1052 45.1 1007 41.2 917 35.6 796 X 2 =22.67 X 2 =13.79 X 2 =6.67 X 2 =15.34 X 2 =7.59
Indigenous people 89 59.7 37 83.1 74 51.7 45 26.1 23 31.0 27 54.5 48 27.9 24 df=2, df=2 df=2 df=2 df=2
Cham 47 75.0 33 58.7 27 72.3 34 44.7 21 44.7 21 42.6 20 40.4 19 p=0.000 p=0.001 p=0.036 p=0.000 p=0.023
Household Member (*)
1-3 439 71.4 279 64.3 279 62.8 275 45.3 197 41.7 182 42.1 184 30.7 134
4-6 1403 72.4 920 65.0 905 60.3 843 47.3 654 45.5 633 40.2 556 36.0 499
7-Over 558 73.2 366 67.1 372 58.8 324 45.8 252 44.7 247 45.7 252 37.6 209
Age
15-24 787 60.2 473 65.7 517 48.2 379 40.4 318 38.9 306 41.4 326 33.0 259
25-34 712 66.9 475 67.0 477 63.6 453 47.5 338 46.9 334 42.1 300 35.5 253
35-44 495 69.5 344 60.6 300 64.0 317 49.0 242 45.1 223 42.0 208 35.6 176
45-55 407 67.6 273 64.4 262 72.0 293 50.5 205 48.9 199 38.8 158 37.8 154
Education
No Schooling 257 61.1 157 66.9 172 68.1 175 44.7 115 41.2 106 44.0 113 34.6 89
Primary School 988 65.4 644 66.6 658 70.3 695 50.1 494 47.1 465 42.4 419 36.0 356
Secondary School 682 64.5 438 63.0 430 55.4 378 43.2 294 43.0 293 40.9 279 32.8 224
High School 382 66.2 253 65.2 249 41.1 157 42.4 162 40.3 154 39.8 152 36.7 140
University 92 79.3 73 51.1 47 40.2 37 41.3 38 47.8 44 31.5 29 35.9 33
PPI Index
Poorest (0-24) 257 56.6 145 73.2 188 66.1 170 41.6 107 48.2 124 44.7 115 41.6 107
Poor (25-49) 942 64.3 604 61.3 577 66.7 628 47.6 447 42.9 404 40.7 383 34.7 327
Medium (50-74) 960 68.1 653 64.9 623 55.8 536 45.5 436 45.2 434 41.6 399 34.6 332
High (75-100) 242 67.6 163 69.4 168 44.6 108 46.7 113 41.3 100 39.3 95 31.5 76
Working Youth
No 1901 67.0 1271 64.7 1230 62.2 1182 47.4 900 45.5 865 41.1 782 35.5 675
Yes 500 58.9 294 65.2 326 52.0 260 40.6 203 39.4 197 42.0 210 33.4 167
Landowner
No 300 61.4 183 69.3 208 56.7 170 47.7 143 40.0 120 44.7 134 32.0 96
Yes 2101 65.9 1382 64.2 1348 60.5 1272 45.8 960 44.8 942 40.8 858 35.5 746
Occupation
Farmer 1096 65.4 715 62.1 681 69.9 766 45.2 495 43.7 479 38.3 420 37.0 406
Business person 390 67.7 264 70.5 275 54.1 211 49.5 193 45.6 178 45.6 178 31.5 123
Sales and services 105 74.0 77 62.9 66 52.4 55 51.4 54 49.5 52 44.8 47 40.0 42
Skilled Manual 96 59.4 57 67.7 65 57.3 55 44.8 43 44.8 43 42.7 41 34.4 33
Housework/housewife 142 54.9 78 72.5 103 57.7 82 43.7 62 50.0 71 50.7 72 31.0 44
Teacher 46 78.3 36 56.5 26 43.5 20 52.2 24 43.5 20 32.6 15 37.0 17
University Student 44 75.0 33 59.1 26 38.6 17 43.2 19 43.2 19 27.3 12 29.5 13
Non-university student 250 61.2 153 67.2 168 42.4 106 40.8 102 37.2 93 42.4 106 32.9 82
Professional-technical-management 90 67.8 61 62.2 56 52.2 47 38.9 35 43.3 39 38.9 35 32.2 29
Government official 93 68.1 62 58.1 54 49.5 46 46.2 43 44.1 41 47.3 44 39.8 37
Forestry Worker 5 60.0 3 80.0 4 60.0 3 20.0 1 60.0 3 20.0 1 40.0 2
Coastal fisherman/woman 35 71.4 25 77.1 27 68.6 24 82.9 29 37.1 13 54.3 19 22.9 8
Freshwater fisherman/woman 35 57.1 20 80.0 28 77.1 27 76.5 26 68.6 24 57.1 20 45.7 16
Note:
A star (*) reports a significant relation betw een a demographic variable and dependent variable at 5% significance level.
Figures in bold represent cells w ith high positive, w hile those in bold italic represent high negative relation betw een both variables
108
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Table 15: When you think about natural resources in Cambodia, what would you say are the three most
important natural resources?
Base: All respondents
109
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Table 16: Priorities for Cambodia
Base: All respondents
110
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Table 17: Have you ever heard the term ‘climate change’?
Base: All respondents
Climate change
Base No Yes Don't know
% # % # % #
All Respondents 2401 15.9 382 83.9 2014 0.2 5
Sex(*)
Male 1203 12.4 149 87.5 1053 0.1 1 x 2 =24.46
Female 1198 19.4 233 80.2 961 0.3 4 df=2,P=0.000
Residence(*)
Urban 820 9.0 74 90.6 743 0.4 3 x 2 =41.82
Rural 1581 19.5 308 80.4 1271 0.1 2 df=2,P=0.000
Region(*)
Phnom Penh 200 6.0 12 94.0 188 0.0 0 x 2 =61.39
Plain 676 11.2 76 88.5 598 0.3 2 df=8
Tonle Sap 750 18.4 138 81.3 610 0.3 2 P=0.000
Coastal 300 12.7 38 87.3 262 0.0 0
Mountain 475 24.8 118 74.9 356 0.2 1
Ethnicity(*)
Khmer 2254 14.4 325 85.4 1924 0.2 5 x 2 =55.87 x 2 =55.87
Indigenous people 89 47.2 42 52.8 47 0.0 0 df=4 df=4
Cham 47 21.3 10 78.7 37 0.0 0 P=0.000 P=0.000
Household Member
1-3 439 15.7 69 84.1 369 0.2 1
4-6 1404 15.7 220 84.1 1181 0.2 3
7-Over 558 16.7 93 83.2 464 0.2 1
Age(*)
15-24 787 13.2 104 86.7 682 0.1 1 x 2 =22.31
25-34 712 13.6 97 86.2 614 0.1 1 df=6
35-44 495 21.4 106 78.4 388 0.2 1 P=0.001
45-55 407 18.4 75 81.1 330 0.5 2
Education(*)
No Schooling 257 40.1 103 59.9 154 0.0 0 x 2 =215.96
Primary School 988 20.3 201 79.3 783 0.4 4 df=8
Secondary School 682 9.2 63 90.8 619 0.0 0 P=0.000
High School 382 3.9 15 96.1 367 0.0 0
University 92 0.0 0 98.9 91 1.1 1
PPI Index(*)
Poorest (0-24) 257 35.4 91 63.8 164 0.8 2 x 2 =130.66
Poor (25-49) 942 19.3 182 80.5 758 0.2 2 df=6
Medium (50-74) 960 9.7 93 90.2 866 0.1 1 P=0.000
High (75-100) 242 6.6 16 93.4 226 0.0 0
Working Youth
No 1901 15.6 296 84.2 1600 0.3 5
Yes 500 17.2 86 82.8 414 0.0 0
Landowner(*)
No 300 21.3 64 78.3 235 0.3 1 x 2 =7.85
Yes 2101 15.1 318 84.7 1779 0.2 4 df=2,P=0.000
Occupation
Farmer 1096 23.2 254 76.6 840 0.2 2
Business person 390 13.8 54 85.9 335 0.3 1
Sales and services 105 7.6 8 92.4 97 0.0 0
Skilled Manual 96 8.3 8 90.6 87 1.0 1
Housework/housewife 142 15.5 22 84.5 120 0.0 0
Teacher 46 0.0 0 100.0 46 0.0 0
University Student 44 0.0 0 97.7 43 2.3 1
Non-university student 250 7.2 18 92.8 232 0.0 0
Professional-technical-management 90 5.6 5 94.4 85 0.0 0
Government official 93 2.2 2 97.8 91 0.0 0
Forestry Worker 5 40.0 2 60.0 3 0.0 0
Coastal fisherman/woman 35 25.7 9 74.3 26 0.0 0
Freshwater fisherman/woman 35 20.0 7 80.0 28 0.0 0
Note:
A star (*) reports a significant relation betw een a demographic variable and dependent variable at 5% signif icance level.
Figures in bold represent cells w ith high positive, w hile those in bold ital i c represent high negative relation betw een both variables
111
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Table 18: Have you ever heard the term ‘global warming’?
Base: All respondents
Global warming
Base No Yes Don't know
% # % # % #
All Respondents 2401 29.8 716 69.7 1674 0.5 11
Sex(*)
Male 1203 22.8 274 76.9 925 0.3 4 x 2 =58.73
Female 1198 36.9 442 62.5 749 0.6 7 df=2,P=0.000
Residence(*)
Urban 820 21.5 176 77.9 639 0.6 5 x 2 =41.82
Rural 1581 34.2 540 65.5 1035 0.4 6 df=2,P=0.000
Region(*)
Phnom Penh 200 11.5 23 88.5 177 0.0 0 x 2 =76.55
Plain 676 26.0 176 73.1 494 0.9 6 df=8
Tonle Sap 750 30.3 227 69.3 520 0.4 3 P=0.000
Coastal 300 29.7 89 70.0 210 0.3 1
Mountain 475 42.3 201 57.5 273 0.2 1
Ethnicity(*)
Khmer 2254 28.5 642 71.0 1601 0.5 11 x 2 =55.87 x 2 =55.87
Indigenous people 89 65.2 58 34.8 31 0.0 0 df=4 df=4
Cham 47 25.5 12 74.5 35 0.0 0 P=0.000 P=0.000
Household Member(*)
1-3 439 29.2 128 69.5 305 1.4 6 x 2 =10.97
4-6 1404 29.3 411 70.4 989 0.3 4 df=4
7-Over 558 31.7 177 68.1 380 0.2 1 P=0.027
Age
15-24 787 27.8 219 71.8 565 0.4 3
25-34 712 28.7 204 70.6 503 0.7 5
35-44 495 33.9 168 65.9 326 0.2 1
45-55 407 30.7 125 68.8 280 0.5 2
Education(*)
No Schooling 257 53.7 138 45.9 118 0.4 1 x 2 =189.44
Primary School 988 36.4 360 63.0 622 0.6 6 df=8
Secondary School 682 24.0 164 75.5 515 0.4 3 P=0.000
High School 382 14.1 54 85.9 328 0.0 0
University 92 0.0 0 98.9 91 1.1 1
PPI Index(*)
Poorest (0-24) 257 54.5 140 45.1 116 0.4 1 x 2 =141.62
Poor (25-49) 942 33.9 319 65.7 619 0.4 4 df=6
Medium (50-74) 960 23.5 226 76.3 732 0.2 2 P=0.000
High (75-100) 242 12.8 31 85.5 207 1.7 4
Working Youth(*)
No 1901 28.4 540 71.1 1352 0.5 9 x 2 =8.73
Yes 500 35.2 176 64.4 322 0.4 2 df=2,P=0.013
Landowner
No 300 31.0 93 68.7 206 0.3 1
Yes 2101 29.7 623 69.9 1468 0.5 10
Occupation
Farmer 1096 39.0 427 60.7 665 0.4 4
Business person 390 31.3 122 67.7 264 1.0 4
Sales and services 105 18.1 19 81.9 86 0.0 0
Skilled Manual 96 13.5 13 84.4 81 2.1 2
Housework/housewife 142 36.6 52 63.4 90 0.0 0
Teacher 46 10.9 5 89.1 41 0.0 0
University Student 44 2.3 1 97.7 43 0.0 0
Non-university student 250 16.8 42 82.8 207 0.4 1
Professional-technical-management 90 17.8 16 82.2 74 0.0 0
Government official 93 6.5 6 93.5 87 0.0 0
Forestry Worker 5 40.0 2 60.0 3 0.0 0
Coastal fisherman/woman 35 42.9 15 57.1 20 0.0 0
Freshwater fisherman/woman 35 25.7 9 74.3 26 0.0 0
Note:
A star (*) reports a signif icant relation betw een a demographic variable and dependent variable at 5% signif icance level.
Figures in bold represent cells w ith high positive, w hile those in bol d i ta l i c represent high negative relation betw een both variables
112
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Table 19: Which term are you more familiar with?
Base: Those who have heard both terms ‘climate change’ and ‘global warming’
113
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Table 20: For the term [climate change]: could you please tell me as much about it as you can?
Base: Those who have heard the term ‘climate change’ and chosen ‘climate change’ as the
most familiar term
Sex
Male Fem ale Total
% # % # % #
Other Dis eas es 43.7 691 42.0 664 85.7 1355
Hotter/ris e in tem perature 34.0 538 32.0 506 66.0 1044
Defores tation locally 33.7 533 22.8 361 56.5 894
Decreas e agricultural products 18.1 286 16.1 254 34.1 540
Drought 17.8 282 12.0 190 29.8 472
High technologies / Buildings 12.8 203 15.0 238 27.9 441
Tem perature change 8.2 130 15.8 250 24.0 380
Indus try/Indus trialis ation 9.5 151 5.4 86 15.0 237
Plants do not grow 7.8 124 6.6 105 14.5 229
Storm 6.6 105 5.7 90 12.3 195
Rainfall les s predictable 5.1 81 4.7 74 9.8 155
Colder/drop in tem perature 4.6 73 5.1 80 9.7 153
Les s rain 4.8 76 3.0 48 7.8 124
Flooding 4.5 71 2.8 44 7.3 115
Malaria 2.3 36 3.2 50 5.4 86
Cars 3.9 62 1.3 20 5.2 82
More rain 2.1 34 2.8 44 4.9 78
Clim ate change 2.2 35 1.1 18 3.4 53
Pollution 2.0 31 0.7 11 2.7 42
Defores tation globally 1.6 26 0.8 12 2.4 38
Dengue 0.6 10 1.6 26 2.3 36
Soil gets hotter 1.1 17 0.9 15 2.0 32
Oil/gas /coal 1.0 16 0.5 8 1.5 24
Natural caus es 0.6 10 0.8 13 1.5 23
GHG/carbon em is s ions 0.7 11 0.4 6 1.1 17
(Dis turbed) ecos ys tem /los s of biodivers ity 0.6 9 0.4 7 1.0 16
Hum an activity 0.6 10 0.3 4 0.9 14
Energy cons um ption 0.4 7 0.3 4 0.7 11
Electricity 0.2 3 0.4 7 0.6 10
God 0.3 5 0.3 4 0.6 9
(Over-) population 0.4 6 0.2 3 0.6 9
(Skin) cancer/s kin dam age 0.1 2 0.4 6 0.5 8
Global warm ing 0.4 6 0.1 1 0.4 7
Cons truction 0.2 3 0.2 3 0.4 6
Weapons 0.3 5 0.1 1 0.4 6
Cutting down trees reduces rain 0.3 4 0.1 2 0.4 6
Greenhous e effect 0.2 3 0.1 2 0.3 5
Capitalis m /com m erce 0.2 3 0.0 0 0.2 3
Nuclear 0.1 1 0.1 2 0.2 3
Developm ent 0.1 2 0.1 1 0.2 3
Greenhous e gas 0.2 3 0.0 0 0.2 3
Em is s ions 0.2 3 0.0 0 0.2 3
Coas tal eros ion 0.1 2 0.0 0 0.1 2
Exces s ive cons um ption 0.1 2 0.0 0 0.1 2
Gas es 0.0 0 0.1 2 0.1 2
Sea level ris e 0.1 1 0.0 0 0.1 1
Purify air 0.0 0 0.1 1 0.1 1
Others 1.7 27 2.0 31 3.7 58
Base 1582
114
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Table 21: For the terrm [global warming]:
w could you please telll me as mu
uch about itt as you ca
an?
Base: Thoose who have heard the term ‘global wa arming’ and d chosen ‘‘global warming’ as the
most famiiliar term
11
15
Understanding Public Percep
ptions of Clima
ate Change in C
Cambodia
Table 22: Would you please tell me where you heard the term [climate change/global
warming]?
Base: Those who have heard at least one of ‘climate change’ or ‘global warming’
116
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Table 23: What do you think causes the weather patterns to change in Cambodia? (Frequency
Table)
Base: All respondents
Items % #
Deforestation in Cambodia 67.3 1616
Pollution by industry 17.6 423
Driving cars and other vehicles 10.9 262
Using fossil fuels 7.0 169
Nature 6.7 162
Fertilizer use 4.6 110
Human activities 4.5 108
Hole in the ozone layer 4.2 100
Waste 4.1 98
Forest fires 3.4 82
Burning wood 3.1 75
Deforestation/Tree-cutting in other countries 2.8 68
Using Air Conditioners 2.5 59
Greenhouse gas emissions 2.0 49
Burning rubbish 1.6 39
Growing population 1.4 33
Too much building 1.1 27
God 0.5 13
Punishment from God 0.2 6
Layer of Earth 0.2 4
Livestock 0.2 4
Natural gas 0.1 3
Don't know 29.1 698
Base 2401
117
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Table 24: What do you think causes the weather patterns to change in Cambodia?
Base: All respondents
118
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Table 25: To what extent do you agree or disagree with the statement? “Some people are
saying that human activities are causing weather patterns around the world to change over
time”
Base: All respondents
119
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Table 26: Do you think your actions contribute to causing climate change?
Base: All respondents
120
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Table 27: How do your actions contribute to causing climate change?
Base: Those who said that their activities have contributed to causing climate change
121
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Table 28: How do your actions contribute to causing climate change?
Base: Those who said that their activities have contributed to causing climate change
Items % #
Using Machine 44.4 354
Cutting the wood for cooking 39.9 318
Burning waste 37.4 298
Cooking 27.0 215
Using Chemical 16.3 130
Doing Agriculture 10.8 86
Careless dumping 7.9 63
Using fan/ Using Gas 6.0 48
Building big house/ using eletricity too much 1.6 13
Poison substances used by people (cosmetic products) 0.5 4
Base 797
122
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Table 29: Do you think climate change affects Cambodia now?
Base: Respondents who had heard the term ‘climate change’
123
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Table 30: Do you think climate change will affect Cambodia in the future?
Base: Respondents who had heard the term ‘climate change’
124
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Table 31: What in your opinion are/will be the effects of climate change here in Cambodia?
(Frequency Table)
Base: Respondents who thought that climate change affected Cambodia now or would affect
Cambodia in the future
Items % #
Health 58.9 886
Harder to farm 47.3 712
Drought 36.3 546
Increasing temperature 34.8 524
Decreasing agricultural products 27.6 416
Water shortages 23.7 356
Less money 14.3 215
Harder to travel 13.6 205
Increasing natural disasters 13.4 201
Poverty 13.0 196
Irregular rainfall 11.4 171
Damage wildlife 10.4 157
Forest shortage 8.0 121
Damage housing 7.8 117
Increase in flood 6.2 94
Sickness and death of animals 4.6 69
Others 0.8 12
Base 1505
125
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Table 32: What in your opinion are the effects of climate change here in Cambodia?
Base: Respondents who thought that climate change affected Cambodia now or in the future
Decreasing
Increasing Increasing Sickness and
Irregular rainfall agricultural Increase in flood Drought Health Forest shortage Poverty Less money Water shortages Flooding Harder to farm Harder to travel Damage housing Damage wildlife Economic Crisis
Base natural disasters temperature Animals died
products
% # % # % # % # % # % # % # % # % # % # % # % # % # % # % # % # % # % #
All Respondents 1505 13.4 201 34.8 524 11.4 171 27.6 416 6.2 94 36.3 546 58.9 886 8.0 121 13.0 196 14.3 215 23.7 356 11.9 179 47.3 712 13.6 205 7.8 117 10.4 157 5.4 82 4.6 69
Sex (*)
Male 793 14.8 117 42.0 333 14.0 111 25.3 201 7.4 59 37.8 300 59.6 473 10.7 85 14.5 115 12.6 100 23.7 188 12.4 98 48.3 383 16.4 130 5.8 46 12.6 100 3.7 29 2.4 19 x2=38.02
Female 712 11.8 84 26.8 191 8.4 60 30.2 215 4.9 35 34.6 246 58.0 413 5.1 36 11.4 81 16.2 115 23.6 168 11.4 81 46.2 329 10.5 75 10.0 71 8.0 57 7.4 53 7.0 50 P=0.000,df=1
Residence (*)
Urban 586 16.9 99 39.4 231 11.8 69 27.3 160 9.0 53 36.5 214 61.8 362 7.5 44 14.0 82 14.2 83 20.3 119 17.4 102 41.5 243 16.9 99 8.5 50 8.9 52 5.6 33 4.1 24 x2=10.38
Rural 919 11.1 102 31.9 293 11.1 102 27.9 256 4.5 41 36.1 332 57.0 524 8.4 77 12.4 114 14.4 132 25.8 237 8.4 77 51.0 469 11.5 106 7.3 67 11.4 105 5.3 49 4.9 45 P=0.001,df=1
Region (*)
Phnom Penh 152 17.1 26 42.1 64 9.9 15 34.9 53 7.9 12 52.0 79 63.2 96 3.3 5 9.9 15 9.9 15 15.8 24 13.2 20 39.5 60 27.6 42 7.2 11 3.3 5 5.9 9 2.0 3 x2=25.74
Plain 431 15.3 66 37.8 163 11.6 50 30.6 132 3.7 16 28.8 124 61.3 264 3.5 15 10.7 46 12.3 53 14.2 61 3.2 14 40.1 173 12.3 53 3.9 17 7.4 32 7.0 30 4.6 20 df=4
Tonle Sap 467 12.8 60 36.6 171 12.6 59 23.6 110 5.8 27 35.3 165 56.5 264 8.6 40 20.3 95 9.4 44 25.7 120 10.3 48 46.5 217 6.0 28 8.8 41 10.3 48 4.9 23 4.1 19 P=0.000
Coastal 186 8.6 16 19.4 36 5.9 11 23.1 43 7.0 13 26.3 49 52.2 97 6.5 12 7.0 13 21.5 40 40.3 75 14.0 26 50.0 93 14.0 26 12.9 24 10.8 20 4.8 9 9.7 18
Mountain 269 12.3 33 33.5 90 13.4 36 29.0 78 9.7 26 48.0 129 61.3 165 18.2 49 10.0 27 23.4 63 28.3 76 26.4 71 62.8 169 20.8 56 8.9 24 19.3 52 4.1 11 3.3 9
Ethnicity (*)
Khmer 1441 13.7 197 35.3 508 11.2 161 27.3 393 6.2 89 36.8 531 59.1 852 7.4 107 13.5 194 13.9 201 23.5 339 12.1 175 46.7 673 14.1 203 7.8 113 10.3 149 5.5 79 4.5 65 x2=6.61
Indigenous people 32 9.4 3 21.9 7 18.8 6 34.4 11 9.4 3 34.4 11 59.4 19 25.0 8 0.0 0 18.8 6 31.3 10 6.3 2 56.3 18 0.0 0 3.1 1 18.8 6 0.0 0 3.1 1 df=2
Cham 26 3.8 1 30.8 8 11.5 3 30.8 8 7.7 2 11.5 3 46.2 12 19.2 5 7.7 2 23.1 6 23.1 6 7.7 2 65.4 17 7.7 2 11.5 3 3.8 1 11.5 3 7.7 2 P=0.037
Household Member (*)
1-3 281 11.0 31 37.7 106 14.2 40 25.6 72 3.6 10 33.1 93 61.6 173 8.2 23 15.7 44 14.2 40 22.8 64 9.3 26 47.3 133 11.7 33 6.8 19 10.7 30 7.5 21 2.8 8 x2=7.59
4-6 874 13.7 120 35.1 307 10.9 95 28.6 250 6.1 53 37.5 328 57.2 500 8.5 74 13.2 115 14.0 122 23.3 204 12.0 105 46.5 406 13.3 116 7.9 69 10.8 94 4.6 40 4.5 39 df=2
7-Over 350 14.3 50 31.7 111 10.3 36 26.9 94 8.9 31 35.7 125 60.9 213 6.9 24 10.6 37 15.1 53 25.1 88 13.7 48 49.4 173 16.0 56 8.3 29 9.4 33 6.0 21 6.3 22 P=0.022
Age (*)
15-24 539 15.4 83 34.5 186 11.9 64 23.7 128 8.0 43 35.8 193 54.5 294 7.1 38 13.0 70 15.0 81 21.2 114 16.5 89 44.3 239 15.4 83 9.5 51 11.7 63 5.4 29 4.8 26 x2=9.04
25-34 449 11.1 50 32.7 147 11.1 50 27.6 124 5.1 23 37.2 167 56.6 254 8.9 40 15.1 68 16.0 72 26.9 121 9.8 44 51.4 231 13.8 62 6.9 31 10.0 45 5.3 24 3.3 15 df=3
35-44 284 15.1 43 38.4 109 10.9 31 30.3 86 5.6 16 36.3 103 62.7 178 8.8 25 10.6 30 13.7 39 22.9 65 12.0 34 46.8 133 15.1 43 7.4 21 9.5 27 4.2 12 6.7 19 P=0.029
45-55 233 10.7 25 35.2 82 11.2 26 33.5 78 5.2 12 35.6 83 68.7 160 7.7 18 12.0 28 9.9 23 24.0 56 5.2 12 46.8 109 7.3 17 6.0 14 9.4 22 7.3 17 3.9 9
Education (*)
No Schooling 99 5.1 5 33.3 33 9.1 9 26.3 26 4.0 4 34.3 34 63.6 63 15.2 15 7.1 7 16.2 16 26.3 26 8.1 8 50.5 50 9.1 9 5.1 5 14.1 14 1.0 1 8.1 8 x2=27.38
Primary School 544 11.2 61 32.7 178 9.7 53 26.8 146 3.5 19 34.2 186 56.6 308 7.4 40 12.7 69 14.0 76 25.4 138 8.1 44 49.8 271 9.0 49 7.9 43 8.6 47 5.5 30 4.4 24 df=4
Secondary School 472 12.5 59 34.3 162 10.2 48 27.8 131 6.8 32 37.1 175 59.3 280 7.2 34 12.3 58 12.3 58 23.1 109 11.9 56 46.2 218 14.2 67 7.6 36 12.7 60 5.3 25 6.8 32 P=0.000
High School 303 17.2 52 35.6 108 14.5 44 26.7 81 10.2 31 39.9 121 58.4 177 8.9 27 15.5 47 15.2 46 21.5 65 19.1 58 44.6 135 19.1 58 8.3 25 9.6 29 7.3 22 1.0 3
University 87 27.6 24 49.4 43 19.5 17 36.8 32 9.2 8 34.5 30 66.7 58 5.7 5 17.2 15 21.8 19 20.7 18 14.9 13 43.7 38 25.3 22 9.2 8 8.0 7 4.6 4 2.3 2
PPI Index (*)
Poorest (0-24) 119 5.0 6 30.3 36 10.1 12 29.4 35 2.5 3 42.9 51 61.3 73 10.1 12 10.1 12 16.0 19 31.1 37 9.2 11 54.6 65 7.6 9 5.0 6 16.8 20 5.0 6 4.2 5 x2=14.80
Poor (25-49) 534 11.0 59 31.6 169 10.3 55 25.7 137 4.5 24 35.4 189 55.6 297 10.1 54 12.7 68 15.0 80 27.7 148 11.2 60 50.9 272 9.6 51 8.4 45 11.6 62 4.9 26 6.2 33 df=3
Medium (50-74) 664 16.3 108 35.8 238 12.0 80 28.2 187 7.1 47 35.2 234 59.0 392 6.0 40 13.3 88 13.1 87 20.6 137 11.6 77 45.8 304 15.5 103 8.0 53 8.6 57 6.0 40 3.9 26 P=0.002
High (75-100) 188 14.9 28 43.1 81 12.8 24 30.3 57 10.6 20 38.3 72 66.0 124 8.0 15 14.9 28 15.4 29 18.1 34 16.5 31 37.8 71 22.3 42 6.9 13 9.6 18 5.3 10 2.7 5
Working Youth (*)
No 1199 13.5 162 34.2 410 11.9 143 29.0 348 6.7 80 37.4 448 59.7 716 8.3 99 13.7 164 13.9 167 24.9 298 12.0 144 47.9 574 13.8 166 7.6 91 10.0 120 5.9 71 3.9 47 x2=5.63
Yes 306 12.7 39 37.3 114 9.2 28 22.2 68 4.6 14 32.0 98 55.6 170 7.2 22 10.5 32 15.7 48 19.0 58 11.4 35 45.1 138 12.7 39 8.5 26 12.1 37 3.6 11 7.2 22 P=0.018,df=1
Landowner (*)
No 184 8.2 15 37.0 68 13.0 24 27.2 50 3.3 6 35.3 65 60.3 111 10.3 19 14.1 26 16.3 30 14.7 27 15.2 28 34.8 64 14.7 27 7.6 14 8.7 16 2.7 5 3.8 7 x2=4.90
Yes 1321 14.1 186 34.5 456 11.1 147 27.7 366 6.7 88 36.4 481 58.7 775 7.7 102 12.9 170 14.0 185 24.9 329 11.4 151 49.1 648 13.5 178 7.8 103 10.7 141 5.8 77 4.7 62 P=0.027,df=1
Occupation
Farmer 584 11.6 68 36.1 211 11.0 64 29.8 174 3.6 21 37.3 218 57.0 333 9.9 58 11.5 67 13.2 77 28.3 165 6.5 38 55.1 322 7.4 43 6.0 35 12.3 72 5.3 31 5.0 29
Business person 245 10.6 26 31.0 76 9.4 23 30.6 75 5.3 13 36.3 89 58.8 144 6.1 15 15.1 37 16.3 40 18.8 46 13.5 33 38.0 93 13.1 32 10.6 26 5.3 13 4.1 10 5.7 14
Sales and services 70 11.4 8 34.3 24 10.0 7 17.1 12 7.1 5 27.1 19 58.6 41 4.3 3 11.4 8 11.4 8 21.4 15 14.3 10 34.3 24 21.4 15 10.0 7 11.4 8 2.9 2 7.1 5
Skilled Manual 69 10.1 7 36.2 25 10.1 7 18.8 13 5.8 4 31.9 22 66.7 46 0.0 0 11.6 8 10.1 7 18.8 13 1.4 1 40.6 28 29.0 20 1.4 1 2.9 2 7.2 5 2.9 2
Housework/housewife 91 8.8 8 34.1 31 8.8 8 30.8 28 4.4 4 27.5 25 68.1 62 5.5 5 6.6 6 12.1 11 19.8 18 11.0 10 42.9 39 6.6 6 12.1 11 8.8 8 9.9 9 8.8 8
Teacher 41 12.2 5 24.4 10 9.8 4 36.6 15 14.6 6 41.5 17 61.0 25 14.6 6 14.6 6 19.5 8 17.1 7 19.5 8 58.5 24 19.5 8 7.3 3 19.5 8 9.8 4 2.4 1
University Student 42 28.6 12 42.9 18 26.2 11 40.5 17 7.1 3 33.3 14 54.8 23 2.4 1 23.8 10 9.5 4 23.8 10 19.0 8 47.6 20 23.8 10 11.9 5 11.9 5 7.1 3 0.0 0
Non-university student 198 18.2 36 29.8 59 13.6 27 22.7 45 13.1 26 41.9 83 54.0 107 8.1 16 15.2 30 15.7 31 24.2 48 23.7 47 42.9 85 18.7 37 10.1 20 12.1 24 7.6 15 2.0 4
Professional-technical-management 69 15.9 11 49.3 34 17.4 12 15.9 11 8.7 6 30.4 21 62.3 43 11.6 8 7.2 5 11.6 8 14.5 10 11.6 8 37.7 26 15.9 11 5.8 4 7.2 5 0.0 0 0.0 0
Government official 70 27.1 19 40.0 28 10.0 7 32.9 23 7.1 5 42.9 30 71.4 50 8.6 6 21.4 15 18.6 13 24.3 17 20.0 14 57.1 40 25.7 18 4.3 3 15.7 11 2.9 2 2.9 2
Forestry Worker 1 0.0 0 100.0 1 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 100.0 1 0.0 0 100.0 1 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 100.0 1 100.0 1 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0
Coastal fisherman/woman 13 0.0 0 7.7 1 15.4 2 7.7 1 7.7 1 30.8 4 53.8 7 7.7 1 0.0 0 61.5 8 46.2 6 7.7 1 53.8 7 23.1 3 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 7.7 1
Freshwater fisherman/woman 22 9.1 2 27.3 6 4.5 1 18.2 4 9.1 2 27.3 6 54.5 12 4.5 1 22.7 5 22.7 5 13.6 3 9.1 2 27.3 6 13.6 3 18.2 4 4.5 1 4.5 1 13.6 3
Note:
A star (*) reports a significant relation betw een a demographic variable and dependent variable at 5% significance level.
Figures in bold represent cells w ith high positive, w hile those in bold italic represent high negative relation betw een both variables
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Table 33: What consequences do the changes in weather have for the life of you and your family?
Base: All respondents
Reduction of
Have a lot of More expense
Nothing is difficult Difficult to cultivate Difficult to work Difficult to travel agricultural Lack of water Heavy rain Sickness Hard to sleep
Base diseases (electricity, water)
products
% # % # % # % # % # % # % # % # % # % # % #
All Respondents 2401 2.0 48 62.9 1510 50.9 1222 45.9 1102 33.9 814 32.7 786 13.3 320 12.1 291 3.3 79 2.4 57 3.1 74
Sex(*)
Male 1203 1.7 20 63.1 759 54.4 655 48.3 581 38.6 464 34.6 416 10.0 120 14.0 168 2.6 31 2.9 35 2.2 27 x 2 =23.44
Female 1198 2.3 28 62.7 751 47.3 567 43.5 521 29.2 350 30.9 370 16.7 200 10.3 123 4.0 48 1.8 22 3.9 47 df=1,P=0.000
Residence(*)
Urban 820 2.9 24 63.4 520 30.0 246 48.4 397 44.4 364 19.1 157 9.6 79 18.4 151 5.0 41 1.7 14 4.4 36 x 2 =5.437 x 2 =104.44
Rural 1581 1.5 24 62.6 990 61.7 976 44.6 705 28.5 450 39.8 629 15.2 241 8.9 140 2.4 38 2.7 43 2.4 38 df=1,P=0.019 df=1,P=0.000
Region(*)
Phnom Penh 200 2.5 5 64.0 128 18.5 37 51.0 102 57.0 114 11.5 23 9.0 18 34.0 68 2.0 4 1.0 2 6.5 13 x 2 =24.40 x 2 =67.28 x 2 =104.50
Plain 676 3.1 21 64.5 436 42.2 285 41.4 280 21.6 146 33.0 223 14.8 100 11.2 76 2.4 16 4.3 29 4.9 33 df=4 df=4 df=4
Tonle Sap 750 1.7 13 56.0 420 53.7 403 40.0 300 33.3 250 32.9 247 16.1 121 5.9 44 4.4 33 1.7 13 1.2 9 P=0.000 P=0.000 P=0.000
Coastal 300 1.0 3 67.3 202 61.7 185 41.7 125 41.7 125 29.0 87 16.3 49 13.3 40 3.0 9 1.7 5 3.3 10
Mountain 475 1.3 6 68.2 324 65.7 312 62.1 295 37.7 179 43.4 206 6.7 32 13.3 63 3.6 17 1.7 8 1.9 9
Ethnicity(*)
Khmer 2254 2.0 45 62.8 1416 49.9 1124 45.7 1030 34.8 784 32.0 721 13.4 302 12.6 285 3.4 77 2.5 57 3.2 73 X 2 =21.25 X 2 =19.20 X 2 =33.32
Indigenous people 89 0.0 0 64.0 57 80.9 72 52.8 47 12.4 11 55.1 49 7.9 7 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 1.1 1 df=2, p=0.000 df=2, p=0.000 df=2, p=0.000
Cham 47 6.4 3 61.7 29 46.8 22 40.4 19 34.0 16 27.7 13 23.4 11 6.4 3 4.3 2 0.0 0 0.0 0
Household Member
1-3 439 2.7 12 64.9 285 46.7 205 46.0 202 31.7 139 28.7 126 13.9 61 12.1 53 3.2 14 3.2 14 3.0 13
4-6 1404 2.1 29 62.5 877 51.6 725 45.7 642 35.1 493 33.4 469 12.7 179 12.7 179 3.3 46 2.4 33 3.2 45
7-Over 558 1.3 7 62.4 348 52.3 292 46.2 258 32.6 182 34.2 191 14.3 80 10.6 59 3.4 19 1.8 10 2.9 16
Age(*)
15-24 787 2.4 19 57.7 454 47.1 371 48.5 382 38.2 301 28.8 227 13.3 105 13.5 106 4.4 35 1.4 11 3.3 26 x 2 =15.30 x 2 =23.24 x 2 =10.00
25-34 712 1.7 12 63.8 454 53.5 381 49.2 350 32.2 229 29.6 211 12.2 87 12.2 87 2.7 19 2.2 16 2.4 17 df=3 df=3 df=3
35-44 495 1.8 9 66.1 327 53.5 265 42.0 208 31.1 154 37.4 185 14.9 74 11.3 56 3.8 19 2.8 14 3.8 19 P=0.002 P=0.000 P=0.018
45-55 407 2.0 8 67.6 275 50.4 205 39.8 162 31.9 130 40.0 163 13.3 54 10.3 42 1.5 6 3.9 16 2.9 12
Education(*)
No Schooling 257 0.8 2 66.9 172 65.0 167 48.6 125 24.1 62 42.4 109 8.9 23 5.8 15 1.2 3 2.7 7 2.7 7 x 2 =12.82 x 2 =30.45 x 2 =48.73
Primary School 988 2.3 23 60.7 600 56.1 554 46.5 459 29.1 288 34.9 345 16.0 158 7.3 72 3.3 33 2.5 25 2.0 20 df=4 df=4 df=4
Secondary School 682 2.1 14 61.6 420 49.0 334 40.8 278 37.0 252 32.1 219 12.0 82 13.5 92 4.0 27 1.8 12 3.8 26 P=0.012 P=0.000 P=0.000
High School 382 2.1 8 64.7 247 37.4 143 49.0 187 44.2 169 24.3 93 12.6 48 22.0 84 3.9 15 2.9 11 4.7 18
University 92 1.1 1 77.2 71 26.1 24 57.6 53 46.7 43 21.7 20 9.8 9 30.4 28 1.1 1 2.2 2 3.3 3
PPI Index(*)
Poorest (0-24) 257 1.6 4 63.4 163 70.4 181 48.6 125 25.7 66 43.6 112 12.5 32 3.1 8 2.3 6 0.8 2 0.8 2 x2=62.58 x2=37.37 x2=188.14
Poor (25-49) 942 1.5 14 60.4 569 61.1 576 46.4 437 29.2 275 37.7 355 14.3 135 7.9 74 3.4 32 3.2 30 2.3 22 df=3 df=3 df=3
Medium (50-74) 960 2.2 21 64.6 620 43.1 414 44.4 426 37.9 364 29.4 282 14.5 139 13.9 133 3.2 31 2.3 22 3.2 31 P=0.000 P=0.000 P=0.000
High (75-100) 242 3.7 9 65.3 158 21.1 51 47.1 114 45.0 109 15.3 37 5.8 14 31.4 76 4.1 10 1.2 3 7.9 19
Working Youth(*)
No 1901 1.9 36 64.4 1225 33.1 630 34.1 649 44.5 845 50.3 956 3.3 62 12.6 240 13.0 248 2.6 49 3.1 59
Yes 500 2.4 12 57.0 285 53.2 266 51.4 257 33.0 165 31.2 156 14.4 72 10.2 51 3.4 17 1.6 8 3.0 15 x 2 =9,38,df=1,P=0.002
Landowner(*)
No 300 4.3 13 67.0 201 28.3 85 52.3 157 35.0 105 19.3 58 7.0 21 13.0 39 4.7 14 2.0 6 3.3 10 x 2 =9.53,df=1,P=0.002
Yes 2101 1.7 35 62.3 1309 34.7 728 33.7 709 45.0 945 54.1 1137 3.1 65 12.0 252 14.2 299 2.4 51 3.0 64
Occupation
Farmer 1096 1.8 20 61.5 674 72.3 792 43.6 478 22.7 249 47.8 524 16.5 181 5.8 64 1.7 19 3.6 40 1.7 19 x 2 =25.915
Business person 390 1.8 7 65.1 254 38.2 149 42.8 167 39 152 19 74 11.5 45 14.4 56 4.1 16 1.3 5 5.1 20 df=12
Sales and services 105 2.9 3 62.9 66 31.4 33 50.5 53 37.1 39 19 20 8.6 9 20 21 1 1 1.9 2 2.9 3 P=0.011( Have a lot of diseases )
Skilled Manual 96 1 1 62.5 60 19.8 19 64.6 62 45.8 44 13.5 13 7.3 7 22.9 22 3.1 3 3.1 3 5.2 5
Housework/housewife 142 3.5 5 64.1 91 23.9 34 42.3 60 42.3 60 12.7 18 14.1 20 15.5 22 4.9 7 0 0 5.6 8 X 2 =128.222
Teacher 46 0 0 82.6 38 30.4 14 56.5 26 39.1 18 15.2 7 6.5 3 13 6 4.3 2 2.2 1 4.3 2 df=12
University Student 44 2.3 1 68.2 30 29.5 13 52.3 23 43.2 19 20.5 9 11.4 5 27.3 12 2.3 1 2.3 1 4.5 2 P=0.000( Difficult to travel )
Non-university student 250 2.4 6 57.6 144 38 95 42.4 106 48 120 26.4 66 11.2 28 18.4 46 6.8 17 0.8 2 3.6 9
Professional-technical-management 90 3.3 3 56.7 51 24.4 22 48.9 44 45.6 41 11.1 10 5.6 5 17.8 16 7.8 7 1.1 1 4.4 4 X 2 =399.261
Government official 93 1.1 1 72 67 32.3 30 57 53 55.9 52 43 40 11.8 11 28 26 4.3 4 2.2 2 2.2 2 df=12
Forestry Worker 5 0 0 80 4 40 2 80 4 20 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 P=0.000( Difficult to cultivate )
Coastal fisherman/woman 35 2.9 1 77.1 27 25.7 9 45.7 16 40 14 8.6 3 8.6 3 2.9 1 14.3 5 0 0 0 0
Freshwater fisherman/woman 35 0 0 80 28 48.6 17 54.3 19 40 14 11.4 4 14.3 5 0 0 5.7 2 0 0 0 0
Note:
A star (*) reports a significant relation betw een a demographic variable and dependent variable at 5% significance level.
Figures in bold represent cells w ith high positive, w hile those in bold italic represent high negative relation betw een both variables
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Table 34: To what extent has your work been affected by changes in the weather?
Base: All respondents
To what extent has your work been affected by changes in the weather?
Badly affected Affected Not affected Don't know
Base
% # % # % # % #
All Respondents 2401 58.2 1398 36.3 872 5.3 127 0.2 4
Sex
Male 1203 60.3 725 35.7 429 4.0 48 0.1 1
Female 1198 56.2 673 37.0 443 6.6 79 0.3 3
Residence
Urban 820 42.3 347 48.4 397 9.0 74 0.2 2
Rural 1581 66.5 1051 30.0 475 3.4 53 0.1 2
Region
Phnom Penh 200 40.0 80 48.0 96 11.5 23 0.5 1
Plain 676 59.3 401 33.1 224 7.5 51 0.0 0
Tonle Sap 750 60.1 451 35.2 264 4.3 32 0.4 3
Coastal 300 52.7 158 46.3 139 1.0 3 0.0 0
Mountain 475 64.8 308 31.4 149 3.8 18 0.0 0
Ethnicity(*)
Khmer 2254 57.5 1296 37.0 833 5.4 122 0.1 3 x 2 =27.64
Indigenous people 89 78.7 70 20.2 18 1.1 1 0.0 0 df=6
Cham 47 59.6 28 31.9 15 6.4 3 2.1 1 P=0.000
Household Member
1-3 439 53.3 234 40.3 177 6.2 27 0.2 1
4-6 1404 59.0 829 35.3 495 5.6 79 0.1 1
7-Over 558 60.0 335 35.8 200 3.8 21 0.4 2
Age
15-24 787 51.8 408 44.2 348 3.7 29 0.3 2
25-34 712 58.7 418 35.4 252 5.9 42 0.0 0
35-44 495 65.1 322 29.5 146 5.3 26 0.2 1
45-55 407 61.4 250 31.0 126 7.4 30 0.2 1
Education
No Schooling 257 72.8 187 22.6 58 3.9 10 0.8 2
Primary School 988 66.0 652 30.3 299 3.6 36 0.1 1
Secondary School 682 52.2 356 40.5 276 7.2 49 0.1 1
High School 382 43.5 166 49.5 189 7.1 27 0.0 0
University 92 40.2 37 54.3 50 5.4 5 0.0 0
PPI Index
Poorest (0-24) 257 72.8 187 26.1 67 0.8 2 0.4 1
Poor (25-49) 942 66.6 627 29.9 282 3.4 32 0.1 1
Medium (50-74) 960 52.8 507 40.1 385 6.9 66 0.2 2
High (75-100) 242 31.8 77 57.0 138 11.2 27 0.0 0
Working Youth
No 1901 58.5 1112 35.6 677 5.7 109 0.2 3
Yes 500 57.2 286 39.0 195 3.6 18 0.2 1
Landowner
No 300 50.7 152 40.0 120 9.0 27 0.3 1
Yes 2101 59.3 1246 35.8 752 4.8 100 0.1 3
Occupation
Farmer 1096 74.0 811 24.3 266 1.6 17 0.2 2
Business person 390 43.3 169 47.2 184 9.5 37 0.0 0
Sales and services 105 54.3 57 36.2 38 9.5 10 0.0 0
Skilled Manual 96 47.9 46 47.9 46 4.2 4 0.0 0
Housework/housewife 142 46.5 66 40.1 57 12.7 18 0.7 1
Teacher 46 30.4 14 60.9 28 8.7 4 0.0 0
University Student 44 43.2 19 54.5 24 2.3 1 0.0 0
Non-university student 250 42.8 107 52.4 131 4.4 11 0.4 1
Professional-technical-management 90 37.8 34 46.7 42 15.6 14 0.0 0
Government official 93 43.0 40 46.2 43 10.8 10 0.0 0
Forestry Worker 5 60.0 3 20.0 1 20.0 1 0.0 0
Coastal fisherman/woman 35 48.6 17 22.9 8 0.0 0 28.6 10
Freshwater fisherman/woman 35 71.4 25 17.1 6 0.0 0 11.4 4
Note:
A star (*) reports a significant relation betw een a demographic variable and dependent variable at 5% signif icance level.
Figures in bold represent cells w ith high positive, w hile those in bold i tali c represent high negative relation betw een both variables
128
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Table 35: To what extent do you agree that you are able to respond to the changing weather?
Base: All respodents
129
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Table 36: To what extent do you agree that your community can respond to the changing
weather?
Base: All respondents
My community can respond to the changing weather
Base Mean Disagree Neutral Agree Don't know
% # % # % # % #
All Respondents 2401 1.99 49.4 1187 10.7 256 31.0 745 8.9 213
Sex(*)
Male 1203 1.90 51.0 614 13.1 157 30.3 365 5.6 67 x 2 =44.14
Female 1198 2.08 47.8 573 8.3 99 31.7 380 12.2 146 df=3,P=0.000
Residence
Urban 820 2.05 47.4 389 10.2 84 32.6 267 9.8 80
Rural 1581 1.97 50.5 798 10.9 172 30.2 478 8.4 133
Region(*)
Phnom Penh 200 1.96 58.0 116 1.0 2 28.5 57 12.5 25 X 2 =109.21
Plain 676 1.92 54.7 370 9.8 66 24.1 163 11.4 77 df=12
Tonle Sap 750 1.99 48.3 362 10.9 82 34.7 260 6.1 46 P=0.000
Coastal 300 1.80 52.3 157 17.7 53 27.7 83 2.3 7
Mountain 475 2.24 38.3 182 11.2 53 38.3 182 12.2 58
Ethnicity(*)
Khmer 2254 2.00 49.7 1120 10.9 246 30.8 694 8.6 194 x 2 =17.18
Indigenous people 89 2.40 37.1 33 6.7 6 38.2 34 18.0 16 df=6
Cham 47 1.70 61.7 29 8.5 4 25.5 12 4.3 2 P=0.008
Household Member
1-3 439 2.10 46.2 203 10.3 45 34.4 151 9.1 40
4-6 1404 1.90 51.5 723 11.3 159 29.0 407 8.2 115
7-Over 558 2.10 46.8 261 9.3 52 33.5 187 10.4 58
Age(*)
15-24 787 2.15 41.9 330 10.8 85 38.0 299 9.3 73 X 2 =36.15
25-34 712 1.92 52.7 375 10.0 71 29.8 212 7.6 54 df=9
35-44 495 1.91 53.7 266 10.7 53 26.1 129 9.5 47 P=0.000
45-55 407 1.92 53.1 216 11.5 47 25.8 105 9.6 39
Education(*)
No Schooling 257 1.97 51.8 133 11.3 29 24.9 64 12.1 31 X 2 =24.53
Primary School 988 1.97 50.9 503 10.7 106 28.6 283 9.7 96 df=12
Secondary School 682 2.00 48.7 332 10.9 74 32.1 219 8.4 57 P=0.017
High School 382 2.06 45.5 174 9.7 37 37.7 144 7.1 27
University 92 1.93 48.9 45 10.9 10 38.0 35 2.2 2
PPI Index
Poorest (0-24) 257 2.09 44.7 115 12.5 32 31.5 81 11.3 29
Poor (25-49) 942 1.99 48.8 460 11.1 105 31.7 299 8.3 78
Medium (50-74) 960 1.96 51.3 492 10.0 96 29.9 287 8.9 85
High (75-100) 242 2.00 49.6 120 9.5 23 32.2 78 8.7 21
Working Youth(*)
No 1901 1.96 50.7 963 11.0 210 30.0 571 8.3 157 X 2 =10.76,
Yes 500 2.12 44.8 224 9.2 46 34.8 174 11.2 56 df=3,P=0.013
Landowner
No 300 1.96 51.3 154 9.7 29 30.7 92 8.3 25
Yes 2101 2.00 49.2 1033 10.8 227 31.1 653 8.9 188
Occupation
Farmer 1096 1.98 50.1 549 11.1 122 29.7 326 9.0 99
Business person 390 1.97 51.0 199 10.8 42 28.5 111 9.7 38
Sales and services 105 1.88 54.3 57 11.4 12 26.7 28 7.6 8
Skilled Manual 96 1.96 55.2 53 6.2 6 26.0 25 12.5 12
Housework/housewife 142 2.12 46.5 66 9.9 14 28.9 41 14.8 21
Teacher 46 1.76 60.9 28 4.3 2 32.6 15 2.2 1
University Student 44 1.82 50.0 22 18.2 8 31.8 14 0.0 0
Non-university student 250 2.22 36.0 90 12.4 31 44.8 112 6.8 17
Professional-technical-management 90 1.93 55.6 50 6.7 6 26.7 24 11.1 10
Government official 93 2.05 47.3 44 6.5 6 39.8 37 6.5 6
Forestry Worker 5 1.80 40.0 2 40.0 2 20.0 1 0.0 0
Coastal fisherman/woman 35 1.71 62.9 22 11.4 4 17.1 6 8.6 3
Freshwater fisherman/woman 35 1.63 62.9 22 11.4 4 25.7 9 0.0 0
Note:
A star (*) reports a significant relation betw een a demographic variable and dependent variable at 5% significance level.
Figures in bold represent cells w ith high positive, w hile those in bold italic represent high negative relation betw een both variables
130
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Table 37: The ability to access water
Base: All respondents
131
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Table 38: The quality of water
Base: All respondents
132
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Table 39: Do people think they have sufficient water for work and personal use?
Base: All respondents
133
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Table 40: Would you say you and your family have the water you need to do your work?
Base: All respondents
Would you say you and your family have the water you
need to do your work?
No Yes Don't Know
Base
% # % # % #
All Respondents 2396 66.8 1601 31.5 755 1.7 40
Sex(*)
Male 1202 65.1 782 33.9 407 1.1 13 X 2 =10.34
Female 1194 68.6 819 29.1 348 2.3 27 df=2, P=0.006
Residence(*)
Urban 816 57.0 465 40.0 326 3.1 25 X 2 =60.29
Rural 1580 71.9 1136 27.2 429 0.9 15 df=2, P=0.000
Region(*)
Phnom Penh 199 29.1 58 67.3 134 3.5 7 X 2 =191.05
Plain 675 74.7 504 24.4 165 0.9 6 df=8, P=0.000
Tonle Sap 747 65.3 488 33.9 253 0.8 6
Coastal 300 65.0 195 34.3 103 0.7 2
Mountain 475 74.9 356 21.1 100 4.0 19
Ethnicity
Khmer 2249 66.4 1494 31.9 718 1.6 37
Indigenous people 89 85.4 76 12.4 11 2.2 2
Cham 47 48.9 23 51.1 24 0.0 0
Household Member
1-3 438 66.0 289 33.1 145 0.9 4
4-6 1400 68.0 952 30.2 423 1.8 25
7-Over 558 64.5 360 33.5 187 2.0 11
Age(*)
15-24 785 63.3 497 34.9 274 1.8 14 X 2 =18.70
25-34 711 65.1 463 33.2 236 1.7 12 df=6, P=0.005
35-44 494 71.5 353 26.1 129 2.4 12
45-55 406 70.9 288 28.6 116 0.5 2
Education(*)
No Schooling 257 79.4 204 19.1 49 1.6 4 X 2 =82.07
Primary School 985 72.5 714 26.1 257 1.4 14 df=8, P=0.000
Secondary School 681 62.3 424 35.1 239 2.6 18
High School 381 56.4 215 43.0 164 0.5 2
University 92 47.8 44 50.0 46 2.2 2
PPI Index(*)
Poorest (0-24) 257 80.2 206 19.8 51 0.0 0 X 2 =124.01
Poor (25-49) 942 76.1 717 22.4 211 1.5 14 df=6, P=0.000
Medium (50-74) 957 58.6 561 39.4 377 2.0 19
High (75-100) 240 48.8 117 48.3 116 2.9 7
Working Youth
No 1896 66.6 1262 31.9 605 1.5 29
Yes 500 67.8 339 30.0 150 2.2 11
Landowner(*)
No 300 61.3 184 35.3 106 3.3 10 X 2 =8.82
Yes 2096 67.6 1417 31.0 649 1.4 30 df=2, P=0.012
Occupation
Farmer 1096 80.4 881 19.2 210 0.5 5
Business person 388 53.9 209 41.8 162 4.4 17
Sales and services 105 50.5 53 47.6 50 1.9 2
Skilled Manual 96 50.0 48 47.9 46 2.1 2
Housework/housewife 142 59.9 85 37.3 53 2.8 4
Teacher 46 50.0 23 45.7 21 4.3 2
University Student 43 48.8 21 51.2 22 0.0 0
Non-university student 248 56.9 141 41.9 104 1.2 3
Professional-technical-management 90 65.6 59 30.0 27 4.4 4
Government official 93 62.4 58 37.6 35 0.0 0
Forestry Worker 5 100.0 5 0.0 0 0.0 0
Coastal fisherman/woman 35 71.4 25 28.6 10 0.0 0
Freshwater fisherman/woman 35 25.7 9 71.4 25 2.9 1
Note:
A star (*) reports a signif icant relation betw een a demographic variable and dependent variable at 5% signif icance level.
Figures in bold represent cells w ith high positive, w hile those in bol d i ta l i c represent high negative relation betw een both variables
134
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Table 41: Does climate change affect human health?
Base: Those who have heard the term ‘climate change’ and said that ‘climate change’ has
affected or will affect Cambodia
No Yes
Base
% # % #
All Respondents 1505 0.1 2 99.9 1503
Sex
Male 793 0.1 1 99.9 792
Female 712 0.1 1 99.9 711
Residence
Urban 586 0.2 1 99.8 585
Rural 919 0.1 1 99.9 918
Region
Phnom Penh 152 0.0 0 100.0 152
Plain 431 0.2 1 99.8 430
Tonle Sap 467 0.2 1 99.8 466
Coastal 186 0.0 0 100.0 186
Mountain 269 0.0 0 100.0 269
Ethnicity
Khmer 1441 0.1 2 99.9 1439
Indigenous people 32 0.0 0 100.0 32
Cham 26 0.0 0 100.0 26
Household Member
1-3 281 0.4 1 99.6 280
4-6 874 0.1 1 99.9 873
7-Over 350 0.0 0 100.0 350
Age
15-24 539 0.0 0 100.0 539
25-34 449 0.2 1 99.8 448
35-44 284 0.0 0 100.0 284
45-55 233 0.4 1 99.6 232
Education
No Schooling 99 1.0 1 99.0 98
Primary School 544 0.0 0 100.0 544
Secondary School 472 0.2 1 99.8 471
High School 303 0.0 0 100.0 303
University 87 0.0 0 100.0 87
PPI Index
Poorest (0-24) 119 0.0 0 100.0 119
Poor (25-49) 534 0.2 1 99.8 533
Medium (50-74) 664 0.0 0 100.0 664
High (75-100) 188 0.5 1 99.5 187
Working Youth
No 1199 0.2 2 99.8 1197
Yes 306 0.0 0 100.0 306
Landowner
No 184 0.5 1 99.5 183
Yes 1321 0.1 1 99.9 1320
Occupation
Farmer 584 0.0 0 100.0 584
Business person 245 0.0 0 100.0 245
Sales and services 70 1.4 1 98.6 69
Skilled Manual 69 0.0 0 100.0 69
Housework/housewife 91 0.0 0 100.0 91
Teacher 41 0.0 0 100.0 41
University Student 42 0.0 0 100.0 42
Non-university student 198 0.0 0 100.0 198
Professional-technical-management 69 1.4 1 98.6 68
Government official 70 0.0 0 100.0 70
Forestry Worker 1 0.0 0 100.0 1
Coastal fisherman/woman 10 0.0 0 100.0 10
Freshwater fisherman/woman 18 0.0 0 100.0 18
135
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Table 42: What are the effects on health? (Frequency Table)
Base: Those who have heard the term ‘climate change’, said that ‘climate change’ has affected
or will affect Cambodia, and who said ‘climate change’ has affected human health
Items % #
High Fever 70.8 1063
Cold 65.0 975
Diarrhoea 59.4 891
Malaria 22.1 331
Dengue 18.0 270
Dizzy 11.3 170
Weakness 11.0 165
Cough 8.8 132
Intestine disease 8.1 122
Skill allergy 7.8 117
Coma 6.8 102
Skin desease or eyes 2.4 36
Hard to sleep 0.3 4
Others 3.4 51
Base 1501
136
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Table 43: What can people do in response to the changing weather? (Frequency Table)
Base: All respondents
Items % #
Plant trees 21.4 514
Get air conditioning/ fan 14.6 351
Keep cool by bathing often or using a fan 14.3 344
New agricultural techniques 14.2 340
Irrigation canals 12.0 287
Other method 11.5 277
Water control structures 11.5 275
Nothing 8.0 192
Build dykes 7.9 189
Rehabilitate water storage structures 6.1 146
Plant as usual 6.0 144
Move away from one area to another 5.4 130
Lack of water for daily life 3.0 72
Increase feedstock for animals 1.0 24
Reduce water consumption 0.5 12
Don't know 25.7 616
Base 2401
137
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Table 44: What can people do in response to the changing weather? (Part I)
Base: All respondents
138
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Table 45: What can people do in response to the changing weather? (Part II)
Base: All respondents
Rehabilitating
Other responding Water control
Nothing Building dykes water storage Planting as usual
Base method structures
structures
% # % # % # % # % # % #
All Respondents 2401 11.5 277 11.5 275 8.0 192 7.9 189 6.1 146 6.0 144
Sex(*)
Male 1203 12.6 152 12.1 145 7.6 92 8.8 106 7.6 92 3.6 43 x 2 =25.10 x 2 =86.50 x 2 =4.08
Female 1198 10.4 125 10.9 130 8.3 100 6.9 83 4.5 54 8.4 101 df=1,P=0.000 df=1,P=0.000 df=1,P=0.043
Residence(*)
Urban 820 10.9 89 9.9 81 6.7 55 5.9 48 5.4 44 4.0 33 x 2 =38.91 x 2 =66.72 x 2 =15.71
Rural 1581 11.9 188 12.3 194 8.7 137 8.9 141 6.5 102 7.0 111 df=1,P=0.000 df=4,p=0.000 df=1,P=0.00
Region(*)
Phnom Penh 200 7.5 15 7.0 14 17.5 35 2.0 4 7.0 14 1.5 3 x 2 =74.78 x 2 =64.66 x 2 =266.08 x 2 =21.84
Plain 676 5.3 36 19.4 131 14.5 98 8.7 59 4.7 32 1.2 8 df=4 df=4 df=4 df=4
Tonle Sap 750 11.2 84 8.3 62 3.9 29 7.6 57 5.9 44 1.7 13 P=0.000 P=0.000 P=0.000 P=0.000
Coastal 300 19.7 59 9.7 29 7.3 22 8.0 24 9.7 29 2.0 6
Mountain 475 17.5 83 8.2 39 1.7 8 9.5 45 5.7 27 24.0 114
Ethnicity
Khmer 2254 11.4 256 11.9 269 8.2 185 8.0 181 6.3 143 5.2 118 X 2 =8.98 X 2 =24.27 X 2 =9.30
Indigenous people 89 14.6 13 2.2 2 5.6 5 5.6 5 3.4 3 24.7 22 df=2, p=0.011 df=2, p=0.000 df=2, p=0.010
Cham 47 14.9 7 6.4 3 4.3 2 4.3 2 0.0 0 0.0 0
Household Member
1-3 439 13.2 58 12.1 53 8.4 37 8.4 37 6.4 28 4.1 18
4-6 1404 11.1 156 11.1 156 8.0 112 7.3 103 5.7 80 6.0 84
7-Over 558 11.3 63 11.8 66 7.7 43 8.8 49 6.8 38 7.5 42
Age(*)
15-24 787 13.0 102 11.1 87 6.6 52 7.6 60 6.1 48 8.4 66
25-34 712 11.8 84 10.7 76 9.7 69 7.0 50 5.3 38 6.0 43
35-44 495 8.9 44 10.3 51 8.7 43 8.9 44 5.1 25 3.8 19
45-55 407 11.5 47 15.0 61 6.9 28 8.6 35 8.6 35 3.9 16
Education(*)
No Schooling 257 12.1 31 8.2 21 6.2 16 8.2 21 5.1 13 14.4 37 x 2 =42.15 x 2 =166.21 x 2 =52.09
Primary School 988 10.1 100 10.8 107 8.1 80 8.0 79 5.0 49 6.1 60 df=4 df=4 df=4
Secondary School 682 11.1 76 12.0 82 7.6 52 8.8 60 6.3 43 3.5 24 P=0.000 P=0.000 P=0.000
High School 382 13.4 51 13.1 50 7.9 30 6.5 25 7.3 28 5.5 21
University 92 20.7 19 16.3 15 15.2 14 4.3 4 14.1 13 2.2 2
PPI Index(*)
Poorest (0-24) 257 15.2 39 8.9 23 5.1 13 7.8 20 7.0 18 14.4 37 x 2 =25.06 x 2 =8.53 x 2 =25.76 x 2 =13.77
Poor (25-49) 942 11.9 112 11.5 108 8.1 76 9.1 86 4.8 45 6.8 64 df=3 df=3 df=3 df=3
Medium (50-74) 960 9.6 92 12.2 117 8.6 83 7.0 67 6.3 60 3.2 31 P=0.000 P=0.036 P=0.000 P=0.003
High (75-100) 242 14.0 34 11.2 27 8.3 20 6.6 16 9.5 23 5.0 12
Working Youth(*)
No 1901 11.3 214 11.6 221 8.1 154 8.3 158 6.4 122 4.9 94
Yes 500 12.6 63 10.8 54 7.6 38 6.2 31 4.8 24 10.0 50
Landowner(*)
No 300 9.7 29 7.7 23 6.7 20 6.0 18 5.7 17 7.3 22
Yes 2101 11.8 248 12.0 252 8.2 172 8.1 171 6.1 129 5.8 122
Occupation
Farmer 1096 17.6 193 12.3 135 7.7 84 9.1 100 5.8 64 7.9 87
Business person 390 11.3 44 11.3 44 9.2 36 5.9 23 4.6 18 4.9 19
Sales and services 105 9.5 10 11.4 12 11.4 12 6.7 7 5.7 6 1.9 2
Skilled Manual 96 8.3 8 9.4 9 16.7 16 5.2 5 2.1 2 2.1 2
Housework/housewife 142 7.7 11 4.2 6 7.0 10 3.5 5 4.2 6 4.2 6
Teacher 46 17.4 8 8.7 4 10.9 5 2.2 1 10.9 5 4.3 2
University Student 44 11.4 5 9.1 4 13.6 6 6.8 3 11.4 5 2.3 1
Non-university student 250 11.6 29 12.0 30 4.0 10 10.4 26 8.0 20 6.0 15
Professional-technical-management 90 8.9 8 16.7 15 3.3 3 8.9 8 5.6 5 4.4 4
Government official 93 20.4 19 11.8 11 8.6 8 9.7 9 11.8 11 6.5 6
Forestry Worker 5 20.0 1 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0
Coastal fisherman/woman 35 2.9 1 5.7 2 5.7 2 0.0 0 2.9 1 8.6 3
Freshwater fisherman/woman 35 8.6 3 11.4 4 8.6 3 5.7 2 11.4 4 2.9 1
Note:
A star (*) reports a significant relation betw een a demographic variable and dependent variable at 5% significance level.
Figures in bold represent cells w ith high positive, w hile those in bold italic represent high negative relation betw een both variables
139
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Table 46: Have you or someone in your family done anything to respond to the changing
weather?
Base: All respondents
140
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Table 47: What have you/they done in response? (Frequency Table)
Base: Those who have done something to respond to the changing weather and/or know
someone who has done something to respond to the changing weather
Items % #
Got air conditioning/ fan 30.9 538
Bathed 21.5 374
Planted trees 21.0 366
Bought fan/ ice 10.6 185
Water control structures 10.3 179
Planted as usual 7.9 137
Moved away from one area to another 6.9 121
Planted more vegetation 6.9 120
Increased household's food stock 5.5 96
Built dykes 5.4 94
Changed/Diversified crops 4.4 76
Irrigation canals 4.3 75
Used hat/ cap/ stayed at home/ under trees 4.2 74
Arranged religious ceremonies 4.1 72
Talked to friends and neighbours 3.5 61
Rehabilitated water storage structures 3.0 53
Nothing 2.9 50
Prayed 2.0 34
Increased feed stock for animals 2.0 34
Prepared boats 1.7 29
Kept communities clean 1.5 27
Started fish farming 1.4 25
Strengthened dwelling against windstorms 1.1 20
Reduced water consumption 1.1 19
Used less energy 1.0 18
Built elevated enclosures for livestock 0.9 16
Paid more attention to weather forecasts 0.7 13
Other 1.1 19
Base
1743
141
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Table 48: What have you/they done in response?
Base: Those who have done something to respond to the changing weather and/or know
someone who has done something to respond to the changing weather
142
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Table 49: Have people in your community done anything in response to the changing weather?
Base: All respondents
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
143
Table 50: What are they doing?
Base: Know of someone in community who has responded to changing weather
Items % #
Got air conditioning/ fan 25.3 336
Wearing hat/ umbrella/ dresses (long hand) 22.0 292
Planting trees 18.4 244
Water control structures 15.1 200
Planting more vegetation 8.9 118
Irrigation canals 8.6 114
Building dykes 7.2 95
Moving away from one area to another 7.1 94
Planting as usual 7.0 93
Arranging religious ceremonies 6.7 89
Changing/diversifying crops 6.0 79
Rehabilitating water storage structures 5.3 70
Increasing household's food stock 5.1 67
Talking to friends and neighbours 3.6 48
Buying other materials 3.0 40
Nothing 2.9 38
Keeping communities clean 2.1 28
Fish farming 1.7 22
Increasing feedstock for animals 1.7 22
Preparing boats 1.5 20
Strengthening dwelling against windstorms 1.1 14
Praying 1.1 14
Building elevated enclosures for livestock 1.0 13
Using less energy 0.8 10
Paying more attention to weather forecasts 0.5 6
Reducing water consumption 0.5 6
Bathing often 0.3 4
Other 0.8 10
Base 1326
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
144
Table 51: What are they doing?
Base: Those who have heard of people in their community who have done something to
respond to the changing weather
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
145
Table 52: If weather changes were to get worse, how would you respond to the impact of these
changes on your work? (Frequency Table)
Base: All respondents
Items % #
Don't know 25.7 617
Reforestation 18.8 452
Asking for donations 14.4 345
Water control structures 12.7 305
Get air conditioning/ fan 12.5 300
Move away from one area to another 8.2 197
Planting more vegetation 7.6 183
Nothing 6.9 166
Irrigation canals 6.8 164
Increasing household's foodstock 6.3 150
Building dykes 6.0 143
Rehabilitating water storage structures 5.4 129
Changing/Diversifying crops 5.2 124
Building elevated enclosures for livestock 3.9 93
Planting as usual 3.5 85
Fish farming 2.0 48
Praying 1.8 44
Preparing boats 1.4 34
Arranging religious ceremonies 1.3 32
Talking to friends and neighbours 1.3 32
Use less energy 1.3 30
Keeping communities clean 1.2 29
Increasing feedstock for animals 1.1 27
Moving to a safer place 1.1 26
Strengthening dwelling against windstorms 1.0 24
Paying more attention to weather forecasts 0.5 13
Reducing water consumption 0.5 11
Base 2401
146
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Table 53: What resources are needed to help people cope?
Base: All respondents
147
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Table 54: What resources are needed to help people cope? (By gender)
Base: All respondents
148
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Table 55: What resources are needed to help people cope? (By residence)
Base: All respondents
149
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Table 56: What resources are needed to help people cope? (By Progress out of Poverty Index)
Base: All respondents
150
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Table 57: To what extent do you agree that changing weather brings benefits to you and your
family?
Base: All respondents
151
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Table 58: To what extent do you agree that you can find the information you need to respond to the
changing weather?
Base: All respondents
152
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Table 59: To what extent do you agree that your community can respond to the changing weather?
Base: All respondents
153
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Table 60: To what extent do you agree that your community has the resources they need to respond
to the changing weather?
Base: All respondents
154
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Table 61: To what extent do you agree that your community is able to respond to drought?
Base: All respondents
155
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Table 62: To what extent do you agree that your community is able to respond to floods?
Base: All respondents
Plain 676 1.83 62.7 424 4.7 32 19.8 134 12.7 86 df=12, P=0.000
Tonle Sap 750 1.88 55.3 415 10.0 75 26.0 195 8.7 65
Coastal 300 1.86 50.7 152 17.7 53 26.3 79 5.3 16
Mountain 475 2.06 49.1 233 7.2 34 32.4 154 11.4 54
Ethnicity(*)
Khmer 2254 1.90 57.0 1285 8.2 185 24.5 553 10.2 231 x 2 =17.47
Indigenous people 89 2.30 41.6 37 4.5 4 37.1 33 16.9 15 df=6
Cham 47 1.80 57.4 27 14.9 7 19.1 9 8.5 4 P=0.008
Household Member
1-3 439 1.90 56.0 246 8.4 37 26.2 115 9.3 41
4-6 1404 1.90 57.6 809 7.8 109 23.9 336 10.7 150
7-Over 558 1.90 53.6 299 9.0 50 26.5 148 10.9 61
Age
15-24 787 1.96 53.1 418 8.9 70 26.8 211 11.2 88
25-34 712 1.88 57.3 408 7.4 53 24.9 177 10.4 74
35-44 495 1.81 59.8 296 8.1 40 23.6 117 8.5 42
45-55 407 1.90 57.0 232 8.1 33 23.1 94 11.8 48
Education
No Schooling 257 1.93 56.4 145 8.2 21 21.8 56 13.6 35
Primary School 988 1.89 56.5 558 8.0 79 25.6 253 9.9 98
Secondary School 682 1.91 56.3 384 8.1 55 23.9 163 11.7 80
High School 382 1.91 54.7 209 8.6 33 27.7 106 8.9 34
University 92 1.71 63.0 58 8.7 8 22.8 21 5.4 5
PPI Index
Poorest (0-24) 257 1.90 55.3 142 8.9 23 26.1 67 9.7 25
Poor (25-49) 942 1.88 56.9 536 8.5 80 24.1 227 10.5 99
Medium (50-74) 960 1.91 55.8 536 7.5 72 26.8 257 9.9 95
High (75-100) 242 1.89 57.9 140 8.7 21 19.8 48 13.6 33
Working Youth
No 1901 1.88 57.0 1084 8.3 157 24.7 469 10.0 191
Yes 500 1.96 54.0 270 7.8 39 26.0 130 12.2 61
Landowner
No 300 1.91 57.3 172 6.0 18 24.7 74 12.0 36
Yes 2101 1.89 56.3 1182 8.5 178 25.0 525 10.3 216
Occupation
Farmer 1096 1.90 56.8 622 7.7 84 24.8 272 10.8 118
Business person 390 1.95 56.4 220 6.2 24 23.6 92 13.8 54
Sales and services 105 1.75 62.9 66 6.7 7 22.9 24 7.6 8
Skilled Manual 96 1.71 66.7 64 3.1 3 22.9 22 7.3 7
Housework/housewife 142 2.04 49.3 70 11.3 16 25.4 36 14.1 20
Teacher 46 2.13 41.3 19 13.0 6 37.0 17 8.7 4
University Student 44 1.68 61.4 27 18.2 8 11.4 5 9.1 4
Non-university student 250 1.98 50.4 126 10.0 25 30.4 76 9.2 23
Professional-technical-management 90 1.81 61.1 55 7.8 7 20.0 18 11.1 10
Government official 93 1.75 58.1 54 11.8 11 26.9 25 3.2 3
Forestry Worker 5 1.80 40.0 2 40.0 2 20.0 1 0.0 0
Coastal fisherman/woman 35 1.71 65.7 23 5.7 2 20.0 7 8.6 3
Freshwater fisherman/woman 35 1.54 71.4 25 5.7 2 20.0 7 2.9 1
Note:
A star (*) reports a signif icant relation betw een a demographic variable and dependent variable at 5% signif icance level.
Figures in bold represent cells w ith high positive, w hile those in bol d i ta l i c represent high negative relation betw een both variables
156
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Table 63: What would you say are the barriers to taking action to respond to the impact of weather
changes?
Base: All respondents
What would you say are the barriers to taking action to respond to
the impact of weather changes?
Not enough Lack of
Lack of tools Others
Base money knowledge
% # % # % # % #
All Respondents 2401 60.0 1440 40.8 980 25.4 609 16.4 394
Sex(*)
Male 1203 59.8 719 43.8 527 30.0 361 15.5 187 X 2 =8.92 X 2 =27.46
Female 1198 60.2 721 37.8 453 20.7 248 17.3 207 df=1 , P=0.003 df=1 , P=0.000
Residence(*)
Urban 820 52.8 433 34.0 279 32.3 265 20.1 165 X 2 =26.67 X 2 =23.78 X 2 =31.79 X 2 =12.51
Rural 1581 63.7 1007 44.3 701 21.8 344 14.5 229 df=1 , P=0.000 df=1 , P=0.000 df=1 , P=0.000 df=1 , P=0.000
Region(*)
Phnom Penh 200 46.0 92 29.5 59 39.5 79 19.0 38 X 2 =127.83 X 2 =182.45 X 2 =33.52 X 2 =107.76
Plain 676 49.6 335 31.8 215 24.4 165 25.4 172 df=4 df=4 df=4 df=4
Tonle Sap 750 57.1 428 32.0 240 25.9 194 18.4 138 P=0.000 P=0.000 P=0.000 P=0.000
Coastal 300 77.3 232 55.0 165 16.7 50 3.3 10
Mountain 475 74.3 353 63.4 301 25.5 121 7.6 36
Ethnicity (*)
Khmer 2254 59.5 1342 40.4 910 26.0 585 16.7 376 X 2 =10.02
Indigenous people 89 66.3 59 55.1 49 15.7 14 12.4 11 df=2, p=0.007
Cham 47 61.7 29 29.8 14 19.1 9 14.9 7
Household Member (*)
1-3 439 62.4 274 35.8 157 23.7 104 17.5 77 X 2 =11.13
4-6 1404 59.8 839 40.3 566 26.7 375 16.5 231 df=2, p=0.004
7-Over 558 58.6 327 46.1 257 23.3 130 15.4 86
Age
15-24 787 59.7 470 42.1 331 26.7 210 16.0 126
25-34 712 60.8 433 40.3 287 27.4 195 17.1 122
35-44 495 61.4 304 39.6 196 22.6 112 17.0 84
45-55 407 57.2 233 40.8 166 22.6 92 15.2 62
Education(*)
No Schooling 257 65.4 168 41.6 107 15.2 39 14.8 38 X 2 =88.27 X 2 =11.62
Primary School 988 60.5 598 40.6 401 20.0 198 18.5 183 df=4 df=4
Secondary School 682 57.3 391 41.8 285 26.4 180 17.2 117 P=0.000 P=0.02
High School 382 60.2 230 39.5 151 39.3 150 12.3 47
University 92 57.6 53 39.1 36 45.7 42 9.8 9
PPI Index(*)
Poorest (0-24) 257 68.1 175 52.1 134 18.3 47 10.9 28 X 2 =31.91 X 2 =43.49 X 2 =47.31 X 2 =12.17
Poor (25-49) 942 64.0 603 45.8 431 20.5 193 15.1 142 df=3 df=3 df=3 df=3
Medium (50-74) 960 56.9 546 35.1 337 28.6 275 18.1 174 P=0.000 P=0.000 P=0.000 P=0.007
High (75-100) 242 47.9 116 32.2 78 38.8 94 20.7 50
Working Youth
No 1901 59.9 1138 40.7 774 26.0 494 16.1 306
Yes 500 60.4 302 41.2 206 23.0 115 17.6 88
Landowner(*)
No 300 58.3 175 34.3 103 29.0 87 20.0 60 X 2 =5.96 ,
Yes 2101 60.2 1265 41.7 877 24.8 522 15.9 334 df=1 , P=0.015
Occupation
Farmer 1096 64.3 705 45.9 503 18.3 201 14.3 157 X 2 =31.99
Business person 390 53.1 207 34.9 136 28.7 112 21.5 84 df=12, p=0.001
Sales and services 105 57.1 60 35.2 37 37.1 39 17.1 18 X 2 =50.10
Skilled Manual 96 61.5 59 36.5 35 28.1 27 18.8 18 df=12, p=0.000
Housework/housewife 142 60.6 86 29.6 42 21.1 30 16.9 24 X 2 =88.48
Teacher 46 60.9 28 45.7 21 43.5 20 13.0 6 df=12, p=0.000
University Student 44 52.3 23 45.5 20 50.0 22 4.5 2
Non-university student 250 59.2 148 43.2 108 31.2 78 14.8 37
Professional-technical-management 90 44.4 40 21.1 19 34.4 31 31.1 28
Government official 93 58.1 54 39.8 37 40.9 38 15.1 14
Forestry Worker 5 100.0 5 60.0 3 20.0 1 0.0 0
Coastal fisherman/woman 35 51.4 18 20.0 7 8.6 3 34.3 12
Freshwater fisherman/woman 35 54.3 19 37.1 13 22.9 8 17.1 6
Note:
A star (*) reports a significant relation betw een a demographic variable and dependent variable at 5% significance level.
Figures in bold represent cells w ith high positive, w hile those in bold italic represent high negative relation betw een both variables
157
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Table 64: Do you know of any individual, organisation or government department that is working to
respond to the changing weather?
Base: All respondents
158
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Table 65: Who has the most power to respond to the changing weather? (Frequency Table)
Base: All respondents
Items % #
The Government 35.2 845
The Prime Minister (Hun Sen) 28.9 695
NGOs 25.4 611
Village chief/local leader 15.8 379
Cambodian people 14.4 346
USA 6.3 152
No one has the power 5.2 124
Scientist 4.0 97
Commune council representative 4.0 95
King 3.9 94
Myself 3.5 83
China 2.9 69
Japan 2.7 65
Europe 2.1 50
Developed countries 2.0 49
God 1.2 30
Friends and family 1.0 24
Rich people 0.9 22
All people in the world 0.4 9
Developing/less developed countries 0.3 8
Industry 0.1 3
Poor countries 0.1 2
Others 0.2 6
Base 2401
159
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Table 66: Who has the most power to respond to the changing weather?
Base: All respondents
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
160
Table 67: Is there anything you think your government can do to help you cope with the problem of
the changing weather?
Base: All respondents
161
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Table 68: What can the government do?
Base: Those who said the government can help them cope with the problem of the changing
weather
% # % # % # % #
All Respondents 1803 48.1 867 43.3 780 30.2 545 29.5 532
Sex(*)
Male 934 59.2 553 33.0 308 29.9 279 39.6 370 X 2 =96.01 X 2 =83.51 X 2 =95.19
Female 869 36.1 314 54.3 472 30.6 266 18.6 162 df=1, P=0.000 df=1, P=0.000 df=1, P=0.000
Residence(*)
Urban 648 53.5 347 35.0 227 24.7 160 34.9 226 X 2 =12.09 X 2 =27.92 X 2 =14.70 X 2 =14.03
Rural 1155 45.0 520 47.9 553 33.3 385 26.5 306 df=1, P=0.001 df=1, P=0.000 df=1, P=0.000 df=1, P=0.000
Region(*)
Phnom Penh 140 60.7 85 30.0 42 30.0 42 47.1 66 X 2 =49.86 X 2 =81.23
Plain 455 40.2 183 34.9 159 36.7 167 26.6 121 df=4, P=0.000 df=4, P=0.000
Tonle Sap 572 52.8 302 37.6 215 31.3 179 28.0 160 X 2 =39.78 X 2 =27.33
Coastal 251 34.7 87 58.6 147 35.1 88 24.7 62 df=4, P=0.000 df=4, P=0.000
Mountain 385 54.5 210 56.4 217 17.9 69 31.9 123
Ethnicity(*)
Khmer 1706 48.1 821 42.3 722 30.7 524 29.4 502 x 2 =8.01 x 2 =9.22
Indigenous people 52 50.0 26 59.6 31 11.5 6 36.5 19 df=2 df=2
Cham 37 48.6 18 54.1 20 35.1 13 29.7 11 P=0.018 P=0.010
Household Member
1-3 330 46.4 153 42.1 139 31.8 105 27.3 90
4-6 1046 49.7 520 41.6 435 30.9 323 29.9 313
7-Over 427 45.4 194 48.2 206 27.4 117 30.2 129
Age(*)
15-24 612 50.0 306 40.7 249 24.7 151 35.9 220 X 2 =13.92
25-34 521 47.8 249 44.9 234 33.0 172 26.1 136 df=3, P=0.003
35-44 379 44.9 170 44.6 169 32.2 122 27.2 103 X 2 =18.83
45-55 291 48.8 142 44.0 128 34.4 100 25.1 73 df=3, P=0.000
Education(*)
No Schooling 155 38.1 59 58.1 90 32.9 51 18.1 28 X 2 =54.99 X 2 =75.11
Primary School 691 39.8 275 50.7 350 33.6 232 19.7 136 df=4, P=0.000 df=4, P=0.000
Secondary School 542 51.8 281 42.1 228 29.3 159 34.7 188 X 2 =10.16 X 2 =87.99
High School 335 60.3 202 28.1 94 24.8 83 42.4 142 df=4, P=0.038 df=4, P=0.000
University 80 62.5 50 22.5 18 25.0 20 47.5 38
PPI Index(*)
Poorest (0-24) 167 38.9 65 60.5 101 26.3 44 19.8 33 X 2 =24.34 X 2 =50.97
Poor (25-49) 690 43.9 303 48.7 336 33.8 233 26.8 185 df=3, P=0.000 df=3, P=0.000
Medium (50-74) 754 50.8 383 37.8 285 29.8 225 30.5 230 X 2 =10.93 X 2 =29.12
High (75-100) 192 60.4 116 30.2 58 22.4 43 43.8 84 df=3, P=0.012 df=3, P=0.000
Working Youth
No 1437 48.2 693 42.7 613 31.3 450 29.2 420
Yes 366 47.5 174 45.6 167 26.0 95 30.6 112
Landowner(*)
No 205 54.6 112 41.5 85 23.4 48 35.6 73 X2=3.97 X2=5.09 X2=4.14
Yes 1598 47.2 755 43.5 695 31.1 497 28.7 459 df=1, P=0.046 df=1, P=0.024 df=1, P=0.042
Occupation
Farmer 770 41.6 320 49.9 384 37.4 288 22.7 175 X 2 =59.675 X 2 =54.162
Business person 301 48.2 145 44.2 133 28.6 86 28.6 86 df=12 df=12
Sales and services 86 46.5 40 34.9 30 36.0 31 32.6 28 P=0.000 P=0.000
Skilled Manual 55 56.4 31 30.9 17 32.7 18 34.5 19
Housework/housewife 104 37.5 39 50.0 52 20.2 21 15.4 16 X 2 =55.651 X 2 =84.927
Teacher 44 68.2 30 29.5 13 13.6 6 45.5 20 df=12 df=12
University Student 38 52.6 20 28.9 11 28.9 11 34.2 13 P=0.000 P=0.000
Non-university student 216 53.7 116 33.8 73 21.8 47 45.4 98
Professional-technical-management 76 71.1 54 21.1 16 15.8 12 38.2 29
Government official 84 66.7 56 39.3 33 19.0 16 48.8 41
Forestry Worker 5 40.0 2 60.0 3 20.0 1 40.0 2
Coastal fisherman/woman 23 47.8 11 56.5 13 21.7 5 8.7 2
Freshwater fisherman/woman 27 33.3 9 40.7 11 14.8 4 18.5 5
Note:
A star (*) reports a significant relation betw een a demographic variable and dependent variable at 5% significance level.
Figures in bold represent cells w ith high positive, w hile those in bold italic represent high negative relation betw een both variables
162
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Table 69: Where do you get information from, and which sources do you trust?
Base: All respondents
Items % #
TV 70.2 1686
Radio 64.6 1550
Friend/Neighbour 62.6 1503
Village chief 24.0 577
Newspaper 12.0 288
Magazine 9.2 220
Spouse 7.3 176
INGOs/NGOs 6.7 161
School 5.9 141
Commune Chief 5.9 141
Parent 5.0 119
Other family member 4.8 115
Internet 2.2 53
Community information meeting 2.0 47
Government officials 1.9 45
Other 1.5 37
Child 1.5 35
Workshop/Conference 0.7 16
Technical or scientific publication 0.3 8
Concert 0.2 4
Religious leader 0.1 3
Base 2401
163
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Table 70: Where do you get information from?
Base: All respondents
Other family Workshop/ Government Community Technical or
Spouse Child Parent Friend/Neighbour Newspaper Magazine TV Radio Internet Concert School Religious leader Vil age chief Commune Chief INGOs/NGOs Other
Base member Conference officials information meeting scientific publication
% # % # % # % # % # % # % # % # % # % # % # % # % # % # % # % # % # % # % # % # % #
All Respondents 2401 7.3 176 1.5 35 5.0 119 4.8 115 62.6 1503 12.0 288 9.2 220 70.2 1686 64.6 1550 2.2 53 0.2 4.0 0.7 16 5.9 141 0.1 3 24.0 577 1.9 45 5.9 141 2.0 47 6.7 161 0.3 8 1.5 37
Sex(*)
Male 1203 7.9 95 1.1 13 5.1 61 4.0 48 66.0 794 14.7 177 10.9 131 75.4 907 73.0 878 3.4 41 0.2 2 1.0 12 6.7 80 0.2 2 21.7 261 2.2 27 6.9 83 1.7 21 5.9 71 0.3 4 1.6 19 X 2 =11.92 X 2 =16.87
Female 1198 6.8 81 1.8 22 4.8 58 5.6 67 59.2 709 9.3 111 7.4 89 65.0 779 56.1 672 1.0 12 0.2 2 0.3 4 5.1 61 0.1 1 26.4 316 1.5 18 4.8 58 2.2 26 7.5 90 0.3 4 1.5 18 df=1 , P=0.001 df=1 , P=0.000
Residence(*)
Urban 820 6.2 51 1.8 15 5.1 42 4.8 39 59.0 484 21.5 176 14.4 118 88.2 723 60.0 492 5.1 42 0.4 3 0.4 3 10.5 86 0.2 2 15.5 127 1.6 13 3.5 29 1.5 12 2.9 24 0.6 5 2.0 16 X 2 =6.79 X 2 =105.76
Rural 1581 7.9 125 1.3 20 4.9 77 4.8 76 64.5 1019 7.1 112 6.5 102 60.9 963 66.9 1058 0.7 11 0.1 1 0.8 13 3.5 55 0.1 1 28.5 450 2.0 32 7.1 112 2.2 35 8.7 137 0.2 3 1.3 21 df=1 , P=0.009 df=1 , P=0.000
Region(*)
Phnom Penh 200 14.0 28 2.0 4 5.0 10 4.5 9 61.0 122 44.5 89 29.5 59 95.5 191 66.0 132 8.0 16 0.5 1 1.0 2 3.5 7 0.0 0 13.5 27 0.5 1 2.0 4 2.5 5 3.5 7 0.0 0 0.0 0 X 2 =23.70 X 2 =25.36
Plain 676 4.9 33 1.0 7 3.6 24 3.3 22 58.1 393 10.8 73 11.1 75 80.2 542 64.3 435 1.5 10 0.0 0 0.1 1 4.1 28 0.1 1 14.1 95 0.9 6 3.4 23 1.6 11 4.0 27 0.6 4 1.5 10 df=4 df=4
Tonle Sap 750 6.1 46 1.5 11 3.2 24 6.1 46 56.0 420 7.7 58 4.4 33 65.1 488 63.3 475 2.0 15 0.1 1 0.4 3 4.0 30 0.0 0 21.3 160 0.9 7 5.3 40 1.7 13 8.5 64 0.1 1 2.7 20 P=0.000 P=0.000
Coastal 300 8.3 25 2.3 7 6.0 18 5.7 17 74.7 224 7.3 22 7.3 22 69.7 209 77.0 231 0.7 2 0.0 0 0.0 0 9.3 28 0.0 0 23.3 70 2.0 6 6.7 20 0.7 2 4.0 12 0.3 1 0.7 2
Mountain 475 9.3 44 1.3 6 9.1 43 4.4 21 72.4 344 9.7 46 6.5 31 53.9 256 58.3 277 2.1 10 0.4 2 2.1 10 10.1 48 0.4 2 47.4 225 5.3 25 11.4 54 3.4 16 10.7 51 0.4 2 1.1 5
Ethnicity (*)
Khmer 2254 7.4 167 1.5 34 4.8 108 4.7 106 62.5 1409 12.6 283 9.5 215 72.0 1624 65.0 1464 2.3 52 0.2 4 0.6 13 6.2 139 0.1 2 22.2 501 1.8 41 5.4 122 1.9 43 6.4 145 0.4 8 1.5 34 x 2 =12.02 x 2 =107.03
Indigenous people 89 5.6 5 1.1 1 9.0 8 5.6 5 67.4 60 1.1 1 2.2 2 21.3 19 44.9 40 0.0 0 0.0 0 3.4 3 2.2 2 1.1 1 62.9 56 4.5 4 20.2 18 3.4 3 16.9 15 0.0 0 2.2 2 df=2 df=2
Cham 47 4.3 2 0.0 0 6.4 3 8.5 4 57.4 27 6.4 3 6.4 3 78.7 37 80.9 38 2.1 1 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 27.7 13 0.0 0 2.1 1 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 2.1 1 P=0.002 P=0.000
Houshold Members(*)
1-3 439 8.2 36 1.1 5 5.0 22 4.3 19 61.3 269 11.2 49 6.2 27 64.9 285 63.1 277 1.8 8 0.2 1 0.9 4 4.1 18 0.0 0 20.5 90 2.3 10 4.6 20 2.1 9 5.7 25 0.9 4 2.1 9 x 2 =7.29 x 2 =10.27
4-6 1404 7.1 99 1.1 16 4.2 59 4.5 63 63.7 894 11.4 160 9.8 138 71.2 1000 63.7 894 1.9 26 0.1 2 0.4 6 6.0 84 0.1 2 24.4 343 1.9 26 5.9 83 1.8 25 5.8 82 0.0 0 1.2 17 df=2 df=2
7-Over 558 7.3 41 2.5 14 6.8 38 5.9 33 60.9 340 14.2 79 9.9 55 71.9 401 67.9 379 3.4 19 0.2 1 1.1 6 7.0 39 0.2 1 25.8 144 1.6 9 6.8 38 2.3 13 9.7 54 0.7 4 2.0 11 P=0.026 P=0.006
Age(*)
15-24 787 2.9 23 0.3 2 11.2 88 6.9 54 67.0 527 16.3 128 13.5 106 72.7 572 73.3 577 2.8 22 0.3 2 0.3 2 16.1 127 0.3 2 21.5 169 1.3 10 5.0 39 1.5 12 5.6 44 0.6 5 2.0 16 X 2 =34.68 X 2 =78.72
25-34 712 10.3 73 0.1 1 3.4 24 3.4 24 63.5 452 13.1 93 9.4 67 69.4 494 60.5 431 3.2 23 0.3 2 0.6 4 1.1 8 0.0 0 24.0 171 1.1 8 5.3 38 2.7 19 6.5 46 0.3 2 1.5 11 df=3 df=3
35-44 495 9.1 45 1.4 7 1.0 5 5.1 25 61.2 303 8.9 44 5.9 29 67.9 336 58.0 287 1.2 6 0.0 0 0.8 4 0.6 3 0.2 1 26.9 133 3.0 15 6.7 33 1.6 8 8.5 42 0.0 0 1.2 6 P=0.000 P=0.000
45-55 407 8.6 35 6.1 25 0.5 2 2.9 12 54.3 221 5.7 23 4.4 18 69.8 284 62.7 255 0.5 2 0.0 0 1.5 6 0.7 3 0.0 0 25.6 104 2.9 12 7.6 31 2.0 8 7.1 29 0.2 1 1.0 4
Education(*)
No Schooling 257 10.9 28 3.1 8 5.1 13 4.3 11 61.9 159 0.4 1 0.4 1 34.6 89 53.3 137 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.4 1 0.0 0 42.8 110 0.8 2 8.9 23 0.8 2 10.1 26 0.0 0 2.7 7 X 2 =13.85 X 2 =10.40
Primary School 988 8.4 83 2.3 23 3.9 39 4.7 46 59.8 591 3.7 37 3.1 31 62.4 617 60.5 598 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.4 4 1.1 11 0.1 1 26.5 262 1.2 12 5.7 56 2.1 21 7.3 72 0.2 2 0.9 9 df=4 df=4
Secondary School 682 6.5 44 0.6 4 4.7 32 5.3 36 66.1 451 13.6 93 11.0 75 80.8 551 68.3 466 0.9 6 0.0 0 0.6 4 6.9 47 0.1 1 20.5 140 2.8 19 5.9 40 1.5 10 5.7 39 0.3 2 1.8 12 P=0.008 P=0.034
High School 382 3.9 15 0.0 0 8.1 31 4.2 16 65.4 250 27.0 103 19.9 76 90.1 344 72.8 278 3.1 12 0.8 3 1.3 5 17.5 67 0.3 1 15.4 59 2.6 10 5.8 22 2.6 10 5.0 19 0.3 1 1.6 6
University 92 6.5 6 0.0 0 4.3 4 6.5 6 56.5 52 58.7 54 40.2 37 92.4 85 77.2 71 38.0 35 1.1 1 3.3 3 16.3 15 0.0 0 6.5 6 2.2 2 0.0 0 4.3 4 5.4 5 3.3 3 3.3 3
PPI Index(*)
Poorest (0-24) 257 10.5 27 1.2 3 6.6 17 5.8 15 66.5 171 1.6 4 1.2 3 37.4 96 59.1 152 0.0 0 0.0 0 1.2 3 3.5 9 0.4 1 44.7 115 1.9 5 10.9 28 4.7 12 8.2 21 0.4 1 1.2 3 X 2 =174.22 X 2 =113.71
Poor (25-49) 942 7.6 72 1.9 18 4.6 43 5.8 55 63.5 598 4.8 45 4.8 45 59.2 558 65.1 613 0.5 5 0.0 0 0.5 5 3.6 34 0.0 0 27.0 254 1.5 14 6.3 59 1.5 14 8.7 82 0.2 2 1.3 12 df=3 df=3
Medium (50-74) 960 6.4 61 1.4 13 4.5 43 3.5 34 61.4 589 17.3 166 11.9 114 84.7 813 65.9 633 2.9 28 0.4 4 0.6 6 8.3 80 0.2 2 18.9 181 1.7 16 5.0 48 1.9 18 5.1 49 0.3 3 2.0 19 P=0.000 P=0.000
High (75-100) 242 6.6 16 0.4 1 6.6 16 4.5 11 59.9 145 30.2 73 24.0 58 90.5 219 62.8 152 8.3 20 0.0 0 0.8 2 7.4 18 0.0 0 11.2 27 4.1 10 2.5 6 1.2 3 3.7 9 0.8 2 1.2 3
Working Youth(*)
No 1901 8.3 157 1.8 34 3.3 62 4.3 81 61.4 1168 12.4 235 9.4 178 72.1 1370 63.0 1197 2.5 47 0.2 4 0.7 14 6.6 125 0.1 2 23.3 443 2.0 38 5.8 111 2.1 40 6.6 125 0.3 5 1.5 29 X 2 =11.58 X 2 =6.95
Yes 500 3.8 19 0.2 1 11.4 57 6.8 34 67.0 335 10.6 53 8.4 42 63.2 316 70.6 353 1.2 6 0.0 0 0.4 2 3.2 16 0.2 1 26.8 134 1.4 7 6.0 30 1.4 7 7.2 36 0.6 3 1.6 8 df=1 , P=0.001 df=1 , P=0.008
Landowner(*)
No 300 12.7 38 2.3 7 4.7 14 4.0 12 66.3 199 10.7 32 8.3 25 63.7 191 55.3 166 1.3 4 0.0 0 0.7 2 4.3 13 0.0 0 17.0 51 1.7 5 4.0 12 1.3 4 3.3 10 0.3 1 1.0 3 X 2 =7.04 X 2 =12.74
Yes 2101 6.6 138 1.3 28 5.0 105 4.9 103 62.1 1304 12.2 256 9.3 195 71.2 1495 65.9 1384 2.3 49 0.2 4 0.7 14 6.1 128 0.1 3 25.0 526 1.9 40 6.1 129 2.0 43 7.2 151 33.3 7 1.6 34 df=1 , P=0.008 df=1 , P=0.000
Occupation(*)
Farmer 1096 8.4 92 1.4 15 3.9 43 4.2 46 60.1 659 2.7 30 2.7 30 55.9 613 65.1 714 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.5 6 1.0 11 0.1 1 32.2 353 1.6 17 7.4 81 2.6 28 8.9 98 0.2 2 1.3 14 X 2 =244.55 X 2 =73.56
Business person 390 12.1 47 1.8 7 6.2 24 5.1 20 65.4 255 15.1 59 11.0 43 75.4 294 53.3 208 1.0 4 0.0 0 0.3 1 1.0 4 0.0 0 20.8 81 1.0 4 5.1 20 1.3 5 5.1 20 0.0 0 1.5 6 df=12 df=12
Sales and services 105 10.5 11 2.9 3 5.7 6 2.9 3 61.0 64 25.7 27 10.5 11 75.4 98 69.5 73 1.9 2 0.0 0 0.0 0 1.0 1 0.0 0 9.5 10 2.9 3 1.9 2 1.9 2 5.7 6 0.0 0 0.0 0 P=0.000 P=0.000
Skil ed Manual 96 11.5 11 3.1 3 2.1 2 8.3 8 68.8 66 14.6 14 10.4 10 80.2 77 67.7 65 3.1 3 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 15.6 15 0.0 0 3.1 3 0.0 0 4.2 4 0.0 0 2.1 2
Housework/housewife 142 12.0 17 5.6 8 2.8 4 4.9 7 66.2 94 5.6 8 4.2 6 73.9 105 52.1 74 1.4 2 0.0 0 0.7 1 0.7 1 0.7 1 21.1 30 1.4 2 4.9 7 0.7 1 2.1 3 0.0 0 0.0 0
Teacher 46 10.9 5 0.0 0 0.0 0 2.2 1 69.6 32 39.1 18 39.1 18 95.7 44 73.9 34 17.4 8 0.0 0 4.3 2 15.2 7 0.0 0 13.0 6 2.2 1 6.5 3 2.2 1 6.5 3 0.0 0 0.0 0
University Student 44 0.0 0 0.0 0 6.8 3 6.8 3 50.0 22 63.6 28 47.7 21 88.6 39 84.1 37 34.1 15 2.3 1 2.3 1 18.2 8 0.0 0 6.8 3 2.3 1 0.0 0 2.3 1 6.8 3 4.5 2 4.5 2
Non-university student 250 2.0 5 1.2 3 11.2 28 6.8 17 69.2 173 21.2 53 18.4 46 89.2 223 77.2 193 2.0 5 0.8 2 0.0 0 41.6 104 0.4 1 13.2 33 0.8 2 3.6 9 1.6 4 2.8 7 0.4 1 2.4 6
Professional-technical-management 90 8.9 8 2.2 2 4.4 4 3.3 3 54.4 49 20.0 18 12.2 11 84.4 76 50.0 45 5.6 5 1.1 1 0.0 0 2.2 2 0.0 0 16.7 15 2.2 2 3.3 3 0.0 0 2.2 2 2.2 2 2.2 2
Government official 93 10.8 10 3.2 3 1.1 1 4.3 4 61.3 57 35.5 33 25.8 24 91.4 85 73.1 68 9.7 9 0.0 0 5.4 5 3.2 3 0.0 0 18.3 17 14.0 13 10.8 10 4.3 4 11.8 11 1.1 1 3.2 3
Forestry Worker 5 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 80.0 4 0.0 0 0.0 0 80.0 4 80.0 4 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 40.0 2 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0
Coastal fisherman/woman 35 20.0 7 0.0 0 14.3 5 8.6 3 74.3 26 2.9 1 0.0 0 48.6 17 65.7 23 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 22.9 8 5.7 2 8.6 3 0.0 0 5.7 2 0.0 0 0.0 0
Freshwater fisherman/woman 35 11.4 4 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 60.0 21 0.0 0 0.0 0 65.7 23 77.1 27 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 31.4 11 0.0 0 5.7 2 2.9 1 11.4 4 0.0 0 5.7 2
Note:
A star (*) reports a significant relation between a demographic variable and dependent variable at 5% significance level.
Figures in bold represent cells with high positive, while those in bold italic represent high negative relation between both variables
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Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Table 71: Have you ever used the Internet?
Base: All respondents
165
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Table 72: When was the last time you listened to radio?
Base: All respondents
Today/yesterday In past week In the past month In past year Never Radio Listener
% # % # % # % # % # % #
All Respondents 2401 31.9 765 14.5 348 10.5 252 12.7 306 30.4 730 56.9 1365
Sex(*)
Male 1203 38.3 461 17.7 213 9.9 119 12.8 154 21.3 256 65.9 793 X 2 =115.58 X 2 =80.80
Female 1198 25.4 304 11.3 135 11.1 133 12.7 152 39.6 474 47.7 572 df=4 , P=0.000 df=1 , P=0.000
Residence
Urban 820 34.6 284 14.1 116 10.0 82 11.0 90 30.2 248 58.8 482
Rural 1581 30.4 481 14.7 232 10.8 170 13.7 216 30.5 482 55.9 883
Region(*)
Phnom Penh 200 39.5 79 18.5 37 9.0 18 8.5 17 24.5 49 67.0 134 X 2 =87.21 X 2 =26.05
Plain 676 32.7 221 14.6 99 9.9 67 13.5 91 29.3 198 57.2 387 df=16 df=4
Tonle Sap 750 33.7 253 15.7 118 11.1 83 10.4 78 29.1 218 60.5 454 P=0.000 P=0.000
Coastal 300 27.3 82 10.0 30 13.0 39 25.0 75 24.7 74 50.3 151
Mountain 475 27.4 130 13.5 64 9.5 45 9.5 45 40.2 191 50.3 239
Ethnicity (*)
Khmer 2254 32.0 721 14.8 333 10.6 239 12.7 286 29.9 675 57.4 1293 X 2 =16.66 X 2 =9.16
Indigenous people 89 28.1 25 7.9 7 5.6 5 11.2 10 47.2 42 41.6 37 df=8, p= 0.034 df=2, p= 0.010
Cham 47 31.9 15 14.9 7 14.9 7 17.0 8 21.3 10 61.7 29
Household Member
1-3 439 29.8 131 11.4 50 11.8 52 15.0 66 31.9 140 53.1 233
4-6 1404 31.3 440 15.2 213 10.2 143 12.3 173 31.0 435 56.7 796
7-Over 558 34.8 194 15.2 85 10.2 57 12.0 67 27.8 155 60.2 336
Age(*)
15-24 787 37.2 293 16.6 131 11.3 89 13.1 103 21.7 171 65.2 513 X 2 =46.99 X 2 =34.58
25-34 712 29.4 209 13.5 96 9.4 67 12.6 90 35.1 250 52.2 372 df=12 df=3
35-44 495 27.5 136 13.1 65 10.9 54 12.5 62 36.0 178 51.5 255 P=0.000 P=0.000
45-55 407 31.2 127 13.8 56 10.3 42 12.5 51 32.2 131 55.3 225
Education(*)
No Schooling 257 18.7 48 11.3 29 7.8 20 16.0 41 46.3 119 37.7 97 X 2 =126.73 X 2 =100.48
Primary School 988 27.2 269 13.0 128 11.1 110 13.0 128 35.7 353 51.3 507 df=16 df=4
Secondary School 682 34.3 234 16.6 113 10.9 74 13.6 93 24.6 168 61.7 421 P=0.000 P=0.000
High School 382 43.7 167 16.2 62 11.0 42 10.2 39 18.8 72 70.9 271
University 92 51.1 47 17.4 16 6.5 6 5.4 5 19.6 18 75.0 69
PPI Index(*)
Poorest (0-24) 257 25.3 65 14.4 37 8.9 23 16.0 41 35.4 91 48.6 125 X 2 =29.20 X 2 =20.23
Poor (25-49) 942 28.7 270 14.1 133 10.8 102 13.8 130 32.6 307 53.6 505 df=12 df=3
Medium (50-74) 960 36.6 351 14.4 138 10.4 100 11.9 114 26.8 257 61.4 589 P=0.004 P=0.000
High (75-100) 242 32.6 79 16.5 40 11.2 27 8.7 21 31.0 75 60.3 146
Working Youth
No 1901 31.3 595 14.4 273 10.4 197 12.4 236 31.6 600 56.0 1065
Yes 500 34.0 170 15.0 75 11.0 55 14.0 70 26.0 130 60.0 300
Landowner(*)
No 300 26.3 79 10.3 31 9.0 27 12.3 37 42.0 126 45.7 137 X 2 =23.32 X 2 =17.48
Yes 2101 32.7 686 15.1 317 10.7 225 12.8 269 28.7 604 58.4 1228 df=4 , P=0.000 df=1 , P=0.000
Occupation(*)
Farmer 1096 28.7 315 14.5 159 11.4 125 14.7 161 30.7 336 54.7 599 X 2 =91.34
Business person 390 26.2 102 13.3 52 9.7 38 10.0 39 40.8 159 49.2 192 df=12
Sales and services 105 41.0 43 7.6 8 14.3 15 8.6 9 28.6 30 62.9 66 P=0.000
Skilled Manual 96 33.3 32 13.5 13 10.4 10 14.6 14 28.1 27 57.3 55
Housework/housewife 142 23.9 34 9.9 14 7.0 10 12.0 17 47.2 67 40.8 58
Teacher 46 50.0 23 15.2 7 8.7 4 6.5 3 19.6 9 73.9 34
University Student 44 59.1 26 20.5 9 2.3 1 9.1 4 9.1 4 81.8 36
Non-university student 250 40.0 100 20.0 50 13.2 33 11.6 29 15.2 38 73.2 183
Professional-technical-management 90 33.3 30 14.4 13 4.4 4 7.8 7 40.0 36 52.2 47
Government official 93 48.4 45 17.2 16 8.6 8 9.7 9 16.1 15 74.2 69
Forestry Worker 5 40.0 2 20.0 1 0.0 0 20.0 1 20.0 1 60.0 3
Coastal fisherman/woman 35 20.0 7 5.7 2 11.4 4 34.3 12 28.6 10 37.1 13
Freshwater fisherman/woman 35 34.3 12 22.9 8 11.4 4 8.6 3 22.9 8 68.6 24
Note:
A star (*) reports a significant relation betw een a demographic variable and dependent variable at 5% significance level.
Figures in bold represent cells w ith high positive, w hile those in bold italic represent high negative relation betw een both variables
166
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Table 73: Radio programmes
Base: Radio listeners
167
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Table 74: Radio stations
Base: Radio listeners
168
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Table 75: Radio listening by day
Base: Radio listeners
radio_listener- All respondents who have listened within the past month
Radio Listener
Sex Residence Age
Total
Male Female Urban Rural 15-24 25-34 35-44 45-55
% # % # % # % # % # % # % # % # % #
Monday 60.7 481 62.5 357 62.7 302 60.8 536 58.1 298 60.2 224 57.9 147 75.1 169 61.4 838
Tuesday (*) 59.0 468 59.4 339 60.6 292 58.4 515 55.4 284 57.5 214 57.5 146 72.4 163 59.2 807 X 2 =20.20 , df=3 , P=0.000
Wednesday (*) 59.5 472 58.8 336 60.8 293 58.4 515 55.2 283 58.1 216 57.9 147 72.0 162 59.2 808 X 2 =19.10 , df=3 , P=0.000
Thursday (*) 59.6 473 57.6 329 60.6 292 57.8 510 55.2 283 56.5 210 56.7 144 73.3 165 58.8 802 X 2 =23.72 , df=3 , P=0.000
Friday (*) 59.0 468 57.4 328 60.2 290 57.4 506 53.8 276 56.2 209 58.3 148 72.4 163 58.4 796 X 2 =23.48 , df=3 , P=0.000
Saturday (*) 71.4 566 65.3 373 73.9 356 66.1 583 67.6 347 65.9 245 68.1 173 77.3 174 68.8 939 X 2 =5.66 , df=1 , P=0.017
Sunday 74.5 591 68.8 393 75.7 365 70.2 619 71.9 369 68.3 254 71.7 182 79.6 179 72.1 984
Every day (*) 55.7 442 53.1 303 56.2 271 53.7 474 48.9 251 53.5 199 54.7 139 69.3 156 54.6 745 X 2 =26.54 , df=3 , P=0.000
Don’t know (*) 20.6 163 22.1 126 17.8 86 23.0 203 19.7 101 24.5 91 24.4 62 15.6 35 21.2 289 X 2 =4.99 , df=1 , P=0.025
Base 793 571 482 882 513 372 254 225 1364
Note:
A star (*) reports a signif icant relation between a demographic variable and dependent variable at 5% signif icance level.
Figures in bold represent cells with high positive, while those in bold italic represent high negative relation between both variables
radio listener All respondents who have listened within the past month
Radio Listener
Sex Residence Age
Total
Male Female Urban Rural 15-24 25-34 35-44 45-55
% # % # % # % # % # % # % # % # % #
6:00 AM - 8: 00 AM (*) 54.9 435 50.8 290 56.8 274 51.1 451 47.0 241 57.8 215 53.1 135 59.6 134 53.2 725 X 2 =4.08 , df=1 , P=0.043
8:01AM - 10:00 AM (*) 10.3 82 18.6 106 12.9 62 14.3 126 19.1 98 15.1 56 6.3 16 8.0 18 13.8 188 X 2 =18.89 , df=1 , P=0.000
10:01 AM - 12:00AM 19.7 156 23.3 133 19.9 96 21.9 193 25.1 129 20.4 76 18.1 46 16.9 38 21.2 289 X 2 =8.87 , df=3 , P=0.031
12:01 PM - 14:00 PM (*) 27.7 220 31.3 179 25.1 121 31.5 278 34.1 175 26.3 98 29.9 76 22.2 50 29.3 399 X 2 =6.19 , df=1 , P=0.013
14:01 PM - 16:00 PM (*) 8.7 69 13.7 78 10.6 51 10.9 96 14.6 75 10.8 40 7.5 19 5.8 13 10.8 147 X 2 =8.49 , df=1 , P=0.004
16:01 PM - 18:00 PM (*) 8.3 66 14.4 82 9.8 47 11.5 101 13.6 70 9.9 37 7.9 20 9.3 21 10.9 148 X 2 =12.51 , df=1 , P=0.000
18:01 PM - 20:00 PM (*) 42.7 339 28.7 164 34.4 166 38.2 337 31.8 163 34.7 129 42.9 109 45.3 102 36.9 503 X 2 =28.06 , df=1 , P=0.000
20:01 PM - 22:00 PM (*) 30.6 243 21.4 122 28.2 136 26.0 229 22.6 116 26.3 98 32.7 83 30.2 68 26.8 365 X 2 =14.57 , df=1 , P=0.000
22:01 PM - 24:00 PM 4.2 33 2.3 13 3.3 16 3.4 30 2.7 14 3.8 14 4.7 12 2.7 6 3.4 46
24:01 AM - 6:00 AM (*) 1.5 12 2.8 16 1.5 7 2.4 21 1.6 8 0.8 3 2.8 7 4.4 10 2.1 28 X 2 =10.52 , df=3 , P=0.015
Don't remember 1.3 10 0.9 5 0.0 0 1.7 15 1.2 6 1.6 6 0.4 1 0.9 2 1.1 15 X 2 =8.28 , df=1 , P=0.004
Base 793 571 482 882 513 372 254 225 1364
Note:
A star (*) reports a significant relation betw een a demographic variable and dependent variable at 5% significance level.
Figures in bold represent cells w ith high positive, w hile those in bold italic represent high negative relation betw een both variables
169
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Table 77: Radio listening by duration
Base: Radio listeners
170
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Table 80: Why have you called in to a phone-in programme?
Base: Respondents who had called in to a phone-in programme
171
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Table 81: When was the last time you watched TV?
Base: All respondents
172
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Table 82: What programme(s) do you usually watch?
Base: TV viewers
173
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Table 84: How many times per day do you watch TV? How long do you watch TV for
each time you watch it?
Base: TV viewers
6:00 AM - 8: 00 AM(*) 25.3 224 12.6 92 25.1 187 14.9 129 19.5 110 19.7 93 20.1 65 18.9 48 19.6 316 X 2 =40.87 df=1, p=0.000
8:01AM - 10:00 AM(*) 5.8 51 10.0 73 10.6 79 5.2 45 11.4 64 8.1 38 3.7 12 3.9 10 7.7 124 X 2 =10.20 df=1, p=0.001
10:01 AM - 12:00AM(*) 15.6 138 21.2 154 24.5 182 12.7 110 24.0 135 18.9 89 10.8 35 13.0 33 18.1 292 X 2 =8.27 df=1, p=0.004
12:01 PM - 14:00 PM(*) 23.3 206 29.4 214 34.1 254 19.1 166 32.7 184 23.9 113 18.6 60 24.8 63 26.1 420 X 2 =7.69 df=1, p=0.006
14:01 PM - 16:00 PM(*) 10.7 95 5.8 42 9.1 68 7.9 69 6.9 39 11.7 55 6.5 21 8.7 22 8.5 137 X 2 =12.72 df=1, p=0.000
16:01 PM - 18:00 PM(*) 12.8 113 11.4 83 11.2 83 13.0 113 10.8 61 14.0 66 9.6 31 15.0 38 12.2 196 X 2 =12.68 df=1, p=0.000
18:01 PM - 20:00 PM(*) 66.7 590 65.4 476 66.9 498 65.4 568 62.7 353 66.7 315 71.2 230 66.1 168 66.1 1066 X 2 =6.45 df=1, p=0.011
20:01 PM - 22:00 PM 48.0 424 56.9 414 53.6 399 50.6 439 53.8 303 53.4 252 50.5 163 47.2 120 52.0 838
22:01 PM - 24:00 PM 4.5 40 2.2 16 4.4 33 2.6 23 3.6 20 3.8 18 2.5 8 3.9 10 3.5 56
24:01 AM - 6:00 AM 0.5 4 0.1 1 0.5 4 0.1 1 0.2 1 0.2 1 0.6 2 0.4 1 0.3 5
1.00 847 1.00 694 1.00 716 1.00 825 1.00 543 0.99 452 1.00 305 0.99 241 1.00 1541
Not remember
0.5 4 0.4 3 0.4 3 0.5 4 0.4 2 0.7 3 0.0 0 0.8 2 0.5 7
884 728 744 868 563 472 323 254 1612
Note:
A star (*) reports a significant relation betw een a demographic variable and dependent variable at 5% significance level.
Figures in bold represent cells w ith high positive, w hile those in bold italic represent high negative relation betw een both variables
174
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Table 86: Which TV stations/channels do you watch?
Base: TV viewers
175
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Table 88: Do you have access to a mobile phone?
Base: All respondents
176
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Table 89: Whose phone do you have access to?
Base: Respondents with access to a mobile phone
177
Understanding Public Perceptions of Climate Change in Cambodia
Table 90: Which network/mobile phone company do you use?
Base: Respondents with own phone
Mobitel (012, qb or
Camshin (011or Hello (015 or Smart mobile Beeline (090,
017, 092 StarCell (098) CADCOMMS Met phone (097) Other
Base 099) 016) (010 & 093) 067, 068)
,089,077) (013)
% # % # % # % # % # % # % # % # % #
All Respondents 1306 51.5 672 17.1 223 6.8 89 1.5 20 0.5 7 51.5 672 2.0 26 4.4 57 0.2 2
Sex(*)
Male 763 54.8 418 17.2 131 7.1 54 0.5 4 0.7 5 52.2 398 2.1 16 4.7 36 0.1 1 X 2 =8.14 X 2 =12.34
Female 543 46.8 254 16.9 92 6.4 35 2.9 16 0.4 2 50.5 274 1.8 10 3.9 21 0.2 1 df=1, p=0.004 df=1, p=0.000
Residence(*)
Urban 552 52.5 290 18.7 103 8.9 49 2.4 13 0.5 3 52.2 288 3.3 18 6.9 38 0.4 2 X 2 =6.40 X 2 =4.30
Rural 754 50.7 382 15.9 120 5.3 40 0.9 7 0.5 4 50.9 384 1.1 8 2.5 19 0.0 0 df=1, p=0.011 df=1, p=0.038
Region(*)
Phnom Penh 153 62.1 95 17.0 26 10.5 16 2.0 3 0.0 0 39.2 60 5.2 8 3.9 6 0.0 0 X 2 =108.18 X 2 =39.39
Plain 399 59.9 239 19.0 76 4.5 18 1.8 7 1.0 4 45.4 181 2.0 8 9.5 38 0.5 2 df=4, p=0.000 df=4, p=0.000
Tonle Sap 353 61.8 218 7.9 28 4.5 16 2.5 9 0.3 1 48.2 170 2.3 8 1.4 5 0.0 0 X 2 =47.45 X 2 =44.14
Coastal 158 27.8 44 17.1 27 17.1 27 0.6 1 0.6 1 62.0 98 0.6 1 5.1 8 0.0 0 df=4, p=0.000 df=4, p=0.000
Mountain 243 31.3 76 27.2 66 4.9 12 0.0 0 0.4 1 67.1 163 0.4 1 0.0 0 0.0 0
Ethnicity (*)
Khmer 1257 52.1 655 17.0 214 6.9 87 1.6 20 0.5 6 51.1 642 2.0 25 4.5 57 0.2 2 X 2 =11.04
Indigenous people 26 19.2 5 23.1 6 0.0 0 0.0 0 3.8 1 73.1 19 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 df=2, p=0.004
Cham 18 50.0 9 16.7 3 11.1 2 0.0 0 0.0 0 50.0 9 5.6 1 0.0 0 0.0 0
Household Member (*)
1-3 234 51.7 121 19.7 46 6.0 14 3.0 7 0.9 2 52.6 123 3.4 8 3.0 7 0.0 0 X 2 =8.93
4-6 774 52.1 403 15.8 122 6.7 52 1.0 8 0.3 2 50.4 390 1.0 8 4.7 36 0.0 0 df=2, p=0.012
7-Over 298 49.7 148 18.5 55 7.7 23 1.7 5 1.0 3 53.4 159 3.4 10 4.7 14 0.7 2
Age(*)
15-24 404 39.4 159 15.1 61 5.4 22 3.5 14 1.2 5 62.4 252 3.7 15 9.2 37 0.2 1 X 2 =34.46 X 2 =45.79
25-34 422 56.2 237 17.1 72 9.0 38 1.2 5 0.5 2 54.0 228 2.1 9 3.6 15 0.2 1 df=3, p=0.000 df=3, p=0.000
35-44 277 57.8 160 21.7 60 4.7 13 0.0 0 0.0 0 40.8 113 0.0 0 1.4 4 0.0 0 X 2 =12.86 X 2 =35.86
45-55 203 57.1 116 14.8 30 7.9 16 0.5 1 0.0 0 38.9 79 1.0 2 0.5 1 0.0 0 df=3, p=0.005 df=3, p=0.005
Education(*)
No Schooling 68 41.2 28 14.7 10 7.4 5 0.0 0 0.0 0 51.5 35 0.0 0 2.9 2 0.0 0 X 2 =18.95
Primary School 438 48.4 212 18.3 80 5.7 25 0.2 1 0.2 1 45.2 198 1.1 5 1.8 8 0.0 0 df=4, p=0.001
Secondary School 413 55.2 228 15.7 65 6.8 28 1.2 5 1.0 4 52.1 215 1.9 8 3.1 13 0.2 1 X 2 =22.37
High School 300 48.0 144 15.0 45 6.7 20 3.3 10 0.3 1 62.0 186 1.7 5 9.0 27 0.3 1 df=4, p=0.000
University 87 69.0 60 26.4 23 12.6 11 4.6 4 1.1 1 43.7 38 9.2 8 8.0 7 0.0 0
PPI Index(*)
Poorest (0-24) 64 25.0 16 12.5 8 3.1 2 0.0 0 0.0 0 68.8 44 0.0 0 3.1 2 0.0 0 X 2 =34.58 X 2 =9.00
Poor (25-49) 399 45.1 180 17.3 69 4.5 18 0.5 2 0.3 1 53.1 212 1.0 4 2.5 10 0.0 0 df=3, p=0.000 df=3, p=0.029
Medium (50-74) 638 55.2 352 16.1 103 7.5 48 1.7 11 0.9 6 49.4 315 2.2 14 5.6 36 0.3 2 X 2 =9.61
High (75-100) 205 60.5 124 21.0 43 10.2 21 3.4 7 0.0 0 49.3 101 3.9 8 4.4 9 0.0 0 df=3, p=0.022
Working Youth(*)
No 1049 53.8 564 17.3 181 7.1 75 1.4 15 0.5 5 49.3 517 1.8 19 4.1 43 0.2 2 X 2 =11.39 X 2 =10.05
Yes 257 42.0 108 16.3 42 5.4 14 1.9 5 0.8 2 60.3 155 2.7 7 5.4 14 0.0 0 df=1, p=0.001 df=1, p=0.002
Landowner
No 157 51.6 81 19.1 30 7.0 11 1.3 2 0.6 1 50.3 79 2.5 4 4.5 7 0.0 0
Yes 1149 51.4 591 16.8 193 6.8 78 1.6 18 0.5 6 51.6 593 1.9 22 4.4 50 0.2 2
Occupation(*)
Farmer 440 47.7 210 14.8 65 4.3 19 0.0 0 0.5 2 52.0 229 0.2 1 1.6 7 0.0 0 X 2 =65.84 X 2 =33.11
Business person 273 54.6 149 17.9 49 9.9 27 1.5 4 0.4 1 51.6 141 2.2 6 2.9 8 0.4 1 df=12 df=12
Sales and services 78 64.1 50 10.3 8 6.4 5 1.3 1 0.0 0 39.7 31 3.8 3 2.6 2 0.0 0 P=0.000 P=0.001
Skilled Manual 56 50.0 28 19.6 11 8.9 5 3.6 2 0.0 0 50.0 28 5.4 3 5.4 3 0.0 0
Housework/housewife 80 47.5 38 21.3 17 8.8 7 1.3 1 0.0 0 40.0 32 1.3 1 2.5 2 0.0 0
Teacher 39 56.4 22 23.1 9 5.1 2 2.6 1 0.0 0 66.7 26 0.0 0 10.3 4 0.0 0
University Student 40 60.0 24 17.5 7 7.5 3 5.0 2 0.0 0 47.5 19 10.0 4 12.5 5 0.0 0
Non-university student 114 28.1 32 11.4 13 4.4 5 6.1 7 2.6 3 70.2 80 4.4 5 15.8 18 0.9 1
Professional-technical-management 77 67.5 52 23.4 18 5.2 4 1.3 1 1.3 1 41.6 32 3.9 3 6.5 5 0.0 0
Government official 88 65.9 58 22.7 20 8.0 7 1.1 1 0.0 0 51.1 45 0.0 0 3.4 3 0.0 0
Forestry Worker 4 25.0 1 25.0 1 25.0 1 0.0 0 0.0 0 75.0 3 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0
Coastal fisherman/woman 16 12.5 2 25.0 4 31.3 5 0.0 0 0.0 0 62.5 10 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0
Freshwater fisherman/woman 14 78.6 11 21.4 3 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 50.0 7 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0
Note:
A star (*) reports a significant relation betw een a demographic variable and dependent variable at 5% significance level.
Figures in bold represent cells w ith high positive, w hile those in bold italic represent high negative relation betw een both variables
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Table 91: Mobile functions used (Frequency Table)
Base: Respondents with own phone
% #
Making / receiving calls 100.0 1304
Listening to music 60.3 787
Ring tones 49.7 649
Taking photographs 47.2 617
Sending and receiving SMS 44.8 585
Playing games 39.1 510
Call tunes 32.6 426
Listening to radio 32.5 425
Recording audio 28.9 377
Using internet 4.8 63
Base 1306
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Table 92: Mobile functions used
Base: Respondents with own phone
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Table 93: What kind of message do you use?
Base: Respondents who use SMS
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Table 94: When was the last time you used the Internet?
Base: All respondents
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Table 95: What do you use the Internet for?
Base: Internet users
% # % # % # % # % #
All Respondents 145 73.1 106 64.8 94 56.6 82 46.2 67 42.1 61
Sex(*)
Male 102 77.5 79 66.7 68 51.0 52 46.1 47 48.0 49 x 2 =6.82 x 2 =10.58
Female 43 62.8 27 60.5 26 69.8 30 46.5 20 27.9 12 df=2,P=0.033 df=2,P=0.005
Residence
Urban 112 71.4 80 65.2 73 58.9 66 46.4 52 38.4 43
Rural 33 78.8 26 63.6 21 48.5 16 45.5 15 54.5 18
Region
Phnom Penh 26 76.9 20 53.8 14 34.6 9 42.3 11 42.3 11
Plain 45 73.3 33 68.9 31 60.0 27 44.4 20 42.2 19
Tonle Sap 41 61.0 25 56.1 23 68.3 28 41.5 17 34.1 14
Coastal 14 92.9 13 71.4 10 42.9 6 42.9 6 64.3 9
Mountain 19 78.9 15 84.2 16 63.2 12 68.4 13 42.1 8
Ethnicity
Khmer 141 74.5 105 66.7 94 58.2 82 46.1 65 41.8 59
Indigenous people 1 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 100.0 1 100.0 1
Cham 1 100.0 1 0.0 0 0.0 0 100.0 1 100.0 1
Household Member
1-3 25 72.0 18 64.0 16 52.0 13 48.0 12 40.0 10
4-6 76 72.4 55 64.5 49 56.6 43 47.4 36 43.4 33
7-Over 42 78.6 33 69.0 29 61.9 26 45.2 19 42.9 18
Age(*)
15-24 82 68.3 56 61.0 50 54.9 45 61.0 50 52.4 43 x 2 =22.94 x 2 =19.71
25-34 43 76.7 33 72.1 31 58.1 25 30.2 13 30.2 13 df=6 df=6
35-44 15 80.0 12 60.0 9 53.3 8 20.0 3 20.0 3 P=0.001 P=0.003
45-55 5 100.0 5 80.0 4 80.0 4 20.0 1 40.0 2
Education(*)
No Schooling 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 x 2 =28.80 x 2 =14.32
Primary School 4 100.0 4 50.0 2 75.0 3 0.0 0 0.0 0 df=6 df=6
Secondary School 26 50.0 13 46.2 12 26.9 7 50.0 13 50.0 13 P=000 P=0.026
High School 56 62.5 35 64.3 36 48.2 27 57.1 32 46.4 26
University 59 91.5 54 74.6 44 76.3 45 37.3 22 37.3 22
PPI Index
Poorest (0-24) 1 100.0 1 100.0 1 0.0 0 100.0 1 100.0 1
Poor (25-49) 15 80.0 12 73.3 11 53.3 8 46.7 7 53.3 8
Medium (50-74) 84 72.6 61 65.5 55 61.9 52 46.4 39 38.1 32
High (75-100) 45 71.1 32 60.0 27 48.9 22 44.4 20 44.4 20
Working Youth(*)
No 117 76.1 89 69.2 81 56.4 66 44.4 52 41.0 48 x 2 =6.30
Yes 28 60.7 17 46.4 13 57.1 16 53.6 15 46.4 13 df=2,P=0.043
Landowner
No 11 72.7 8 63.6 7 45.5 5 45.5 5 63.6 7
Yes 134 73.1 98 64.9 87 57.5 77 46.3 62 40.3 54
Occupation
Farmer 20 100.0 4 75.0 3 50.0 2 50.0 2 75.0 3
Business person 80 62.5 10 62.5 10 56.3 9 43.8 7 31.3 5
Sales and services 25 60.0 3 80.0 4 40.0 2 40.0 2 20.0 1
Skilled Manual 40 37.5 3 37.5 3 50.0 4 37.5 3 50.0 4
Housework/housewife 20 75.0 3 75.0 3 75.0 3 25.0 1 0.0 0
Teacher 60 91.7 11 75.0 9 83.3 10 33.3 4 33.3 4
University Student 130 92.3 24 76.9 20 73.1 19 61.5 16 46.2 12
Non-university student 165 60.6 20 57.6 19 36.4 12 63.6 21 60.6 20
Professional-technical-management 75 73.3 11 66.7 10 66.7 10 33.3 5 26.7 4
Government official 100 85.0 17 65.0 13 55.0 11 30.0 6 40.0 8
Coastal fisherman/woman 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0
Freshwater fisherman/woman 5 100.0 1 0.0 0 100.0 1 100.0 1 100.0 1
Note:
A star (*) reports a significant relation betw een a demographic variable and dependent variable at 5% significance level.
Figures in bold represent cells w ith high positive, w hile those in bold italic represent high negative relation betw een both variables
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Table 96: Where do you use the Internet?
Base: Internet users
At home
At office At internet café Wi Fi Other
Base (landline)
% # % # % # % # % #
All Respondents 145 26.2 38 58.6 85 19.3 28 1.4 2 23.4 34
Sex
Male 102 25.5 26 61.8 63 20.6 21 1.0 1 24.5 25
Female 43 27.9 12 51.2 22 16.3 7 2.3 1 20.9 9
Residence(*)
Urban 112 25.9 29 65.2 73 17.9 20 1.8 2 20.5 23 x 2 =8.72
Rural 33 27.3 9 36.4 12 24.2 8 0.0 0 33.3 11 df=1,P=0.003
Region
Phnom Penh 26 26.9 7 65.4 17 30.8 8 0.0 0 19.2 5
Plain 45 28.9 13 64.4 29 15.6 7 2.2 1 28.9 13
Tonle Sap 41 14.6 6 65.9 27 17.1 7 2.4 1 12.2 5
Coastal 14 21.4 3 35.7 5 0.0 0 0.0 0 50.0 7
Mountain 19 47.4 9 36.8 7 31.6 6 0.0 0 21.1 4
Ethnicity
Khmer 143 26.6 38 59.4 85 18.9 27 1.4 2 23.1 33
Indigenous people 1 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 100.0 1
Cham 1 0.0 0 0.0 0 100.0 1 0.0 0 0.0 0
Household Member
1-3 26 23.1 6 61.5 16 23.1 6 0.0 0 30.8 8
4-6 76 28.9 22 53.9 41 22.4 17 2.6 2 22.4 17
7-Over 43 23.3 10 65.1 28 11.6 5 0.0 0 20.9 9
Age(*)
15-24 82 13.4 11 62.2 51 17.1 14 2.4 2 30.5 25 x 2 =20.42 x 2 =8.54
25-34 43 34.9 15 58.1 25 23.3 10 0.0 0 20.9 9 df=3 df=3
35-44 15 60.0 9 53.3 8 13.3 2 0.0 0 0.0 0 P=0.000 P=0.036
45-55 5 60.0 3 20.0 1 40.0 2 0.0 0 0.0 0
Education(*)
No Schooling 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 x 2 =13.84
Primary School 4 25.0 1 0.0 0 50.0 2 0.0 0 25.0 1 df=3
Secondary School 26 11.5 3 57.7 15 26.9 7 0.0 0 11.5 3 P=0.003
High School 56 16.1 9 62.5 35 17.9 10 0.0 0 26.8 15
University 59 42.4 25 59.3 35 15.3 9 3.4 2 25.4 15
PPI Index(*)
Poorest (0-24) 1 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 100.0 1 x 2 =8.81
Poor (25-49) 15 26.7 4 46.7 7 6.7 1 0.0 0 33.3 5 df=3
Medium (50-74) 84 26.2 22 57.1 48 14.3 12 2.4 2 26.2 22 P=0.032
High (75-100) 45 26.7 12 66.7 30 33.3 15 0.0 0 13.3 6
Working Youth
No 117 26.5 31 62.4 73 20.5 24 0.9 1 23.1 27
Yes 28 25.0 7 42.9 12 14.3 4 3.6 1 25.0 7
Landowner
No 11 45.5 5 45.5 5 18.2 2 0.0 0 18.2 2
Yes 134 24.6 33 59.7 80 19.4 26 1.5 2 23.9 32
Occupation
Farmer 4 50.0 2 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 50.0 2
Business person 17 5.9 1 70.6 12 23.5 4 0.0 0 5.9 1
Sales and services 5 20.0 1 60.0 3 40.0 2 0.0 0 20.0 1
Skilled Manual 8 12.5 1 50.0 4 12.5 1 0.0 0 37.5 3
Housework/housewife 4 25.0 1 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 75.0 3
Teacher 12 33.3 4 75.0 9 16.7 2 0.0 0 25.0 3
University Student 26 19.2 5 73.1 19 19.2 5 3.8 1 38.5 10
Non-university student 33 0.0 0 75.8 25 18.2 6 0.0 0 27.3 9
Professional-technical-management 16 50.0 8 37.5 6 31.3 5 6.3 1 12.5 2
Government official 20 75.0 15 35.0 7 15.0 3 0.0 0 0.0 0
Coastal fisherman/woman 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0
Freshwater fisherman/woman 1 0.0 0 0.0 0 100.0 1 0.0 0 0.0 0
Note:
A star (*) reports a significant relation betw een a demographic variable and dependent variable at 5% significance level.
Figures in bold represent cells w ith high positive, w hile those in bold italic represent high negative relation betw een both variables
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Table 97: When was the last time you watched a VCD/DVD?
Base: All respondents
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Table 98: Which programmes do you usually watch?
Base: VCD/DVD viewers
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Table 99: Where do you usually watch? (Frequency Table)
Base: VCD/DVD viewers
Items % #
My own house 64.8 908
Friend or neighbour’s house 25.6 359
Relative's house 18.9 265
Coffee shop 16.4 230
Paid-for public service 2.9 40
Free public service 1.2 17
Other 0.8 11
NGOs 0.6 8
On the bus 0.1 1
Base 1401
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Table 100: Usually, where do you watch?
Base: VCD/DVD viewers
Friend or
My own house Relative's house Coffee shop
Base neighbour's house
% # % # % # % #
All Respondents 1401 64.8 908 25.6 359 18.9 265 16.4 230
Sex(*)
Male 770 62.1 478 28.1 216 17.8 137 27.7 213 X 2 =5.59
Female 631 68.1 430 22.7 143 20.3 128 2.7 17 df=1 , P=0.018
Residence(*)
Urban 479 80.0 383 19.2 92 11.3 54 15.9 76 X 2 =73.22
Rural 922 56.9 525 29.0 267 22.9 211 16.7 154 df=1 , P=0.000
Region(*)
Phnom Penh 146 81.5 119 17.1 25 5.5 8 19.2 28 X 2 =58.94
Plain 388 72.2 280 24.7 96 16.8 65 18.6 72 df=4
Tonle Sap 391 64.7 253 20.7 81 20.7 81 4.9 19 P=0.000
Coastal 218 47.7 104 37.2 81 25.7 56 35.3 77
Mountain 258 58.9 152 29.5 76 21.3 55 13.2 34
Ethnicity(*)
Khmer 1320 66.2 874 25.2 332 18.9 249 16.4 217 X 2 =20.81
Indigenous people 45 37.8 17 44.4 20 8.9 4 8.9 4 df=2, p=0.000
Cham 31 45.2 14 22.6 7 35.5 11 25.8 8
Household Member(*)
1-3 238 54.2 129 22.7 54 24.4 58 17.2 41 X 2 =14.27
4-6 822 66.7 548 25.2 207 19.2 158 15.9 131 df=2, p=0.001
7-Over 341 67.7 231 28.7 98 14.4 49 17.0 58
Age(*)
15-24 543 65.6 356 30.4 165 21.0 114 13.6 74 X 2 =8.86
25-34 423 60.3 255 26.7 113 20.6 87 21.0 89 df=3
35-44 249 65.1 162 20.5 51 16.1 40 18.5 46 P=0.031
45-55 186 72.6 135 16.1 30 12.9 24 11.3 21
Education(*)
No Schooling 122 48.4 59 37.7 46 18.9 23 9.8 12 X 2 =80.83
Primary School 536 54.9 294 28.7 154 22.6 121 14.7 79 df=4
Secondary School 428 70.6 302 23.6 101 18.0 77 19.6 84 P=0.000
High School 258 77.9 201 20.2 52 14.7 38 19.0 49
University 57 91.2 52 10.5 6 10.5 6 10.5 6
PPI Index(*)
Poorest (0-24) 129 13.2 17 55.8 72 35.7 46 14.7 19 X 2 =322.33
Poor (25-49) 551 51.4 283 34.1 188 25.8 142 18.5 102 df=3
Medium (50-74) 582 82.0 477 14.9 87 12.0 70 16.0 93 P=0.000
High (75-100) 139 94.2 131 8.6 12 5.0 7 11.5 16
Working Youth(*)
No 1064 66.1 703 23.6 251 18.3 195 17.4 185 X 2 =9.60 ,
Yes 337 60.8 205 32.0 108 20.8 70 13.4 45 df=1 , P=0.002
Landowner(*)
No 182 53.8 98 30.2 55 17.0 31 22.0 40 X 2 =11.02
Yes 1219 66.4 810 24.9 304 19.2 234 15.6 190 df=1 , P=0.001
Occupation(*)
Farmer 588 51.0 300 34.0 200 25.5 150 16.0 94 X 2 =117.99
Business person 225 83.1 187 10.2 23 9.8 22 11.6 26 df=12
Sales and services 73 67.1 49 19.2 14 11.0 8 30.1 22 P=0.000
Skilled Manual 65 64.6 42 29.2 19 7.7 5 33.8 22
Housework/housewife 73 74.0 54 21.9 16 15.1 11 6.8 5
Teacher 33 90.9 30 9.1 3 9.1 3 21.2 7
University Student 26 96.2 25 19.2 5 19.2 5 15.4 4
Non-university student 184 70.7 130 28.8 53 21.7 40 13.6 25
Professional-technical-management 49 75.5 37 16.3 8 16.3 8 8.2 4
Government official 54 72.2 39 11.1 6 5.6 3 27.8 15
Forestry Worker 4 75.0 3 0.0 0 25.0 1 25.0 1
Coastal fisherman/woman 28 46.4 13 35.7 10 35.7 10 28.6 8
Freshwater fisherman/woman 21 52.4 11 47.6 10 23.8 5 14.3 3
Note:
A star (*) reports a significant relation betw een a demographic variable and dependent variable at 5% significance level.
Figures in bold represent cells w ith high positive, w hile those in bol d i talic represent high negative relation betw een both variables
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Table 101: Have you ever heard of outreach activities?
Base: All respondents
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Table 102: When was the last time you participated in outreach activities?
Base: Respondents who had heard of outreach activities
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Table 103: Have you ever participated in the following outreach activities?
Base: All respondents
Direct
Educational Group
Workshop education at Listening club Show card
Base Play discussion
home/family
% # % # % # % # % # % #
All Respondents 2396 21.6 518 37.3 894 13.1 313 21.7 520 5.8 140 28.9 693
Sex(*)
Male 1201 23.1 278 35.9 431 15.1 181 18.7 225 6.3 75 24.9 299 x 2 =8.63 x 2 =12.48 x 2 =18.77
Female 1195 20.1 240 38.7 463 11.0 132 24.7 295 5.4 65 33.0 394 df=1,P=0.003 df=1,P=0.000 df=1,P=0.000
Residence(*)
Urban 818 23.1 189 36.9 302 16.8 137 20.2 165 6.0 49 27.5 224 x=14.89
Rural 1578 20.8 329 37.4 592 11.2 176 22.5 355 5.8 91 29.7 469 df=1,P=0.000
Region(*)
Phnom Penh 200 14.0 28 23.5 47 14.0 28 13.5 27 4.0 8 21.0 42 x 2 =33.42 x 2 =68.61 x 2 =14.75 x 2 =21.89
Plain 674 21.8 147 28.5 192 12.2 82 20.8 140 6.8 46 25.1 169 df=4 df=4 df=4 df=4
Tonle Sap 750 19.6 147 46.7 350 15.2 114 25.2 189 5.0 37 34.4 257 P=0.000 P=0.000 P=0.005 P=0.000
Coastal 300 33.3 100 38.0 114 12.0 36 23.0 69 7.7 23 30.0 90
Mountain 472 20.3 96 40.2 191 11.2 53 20.0 95 5.5 26 28.4 135
Ethnicity(*)
Khmer 2251 22.0 496 37.3 839 13.3 299 21.5 484 5.7 129 29.0 652 X 2 =7.16
Indigenous people 87 10.3 9 37.1 33 10.1 9 27.0 24 8.0 7 28.1 25 df=2, p=0.028
Cham 47 25.5 12 38.3 18 8.7 4 21.3 10 8.7 4 30.4 14
Household Member(*)
1-3 439 23.2 102 41.0 180 14.8 65 23.0 101 5.7 25 28.0 122 X 2 =7.88
4-6 1401 19.7 276 36.0 505 12.2 170 21.6 303 5.2 73 28.5 399 df=2, p=0.019
7-Over 556 25.2 140 37.5 209 14.0 78 20.9 116 7.5 42 30.9 172
Age(*)
15-24 786 29.0 228 33.5 264 13.6 107 21.6 170 7.1 56 34.4 270 x 2 =44.48 x 2 =7.91 x 2 =16.88
25-34 709 21.0 149 38.4 273 11.1 79 22.6 161 5.4 38 26.0 185 df=3 df=3 df=3
35-44 495 16.0 79 38.4 190 12.6 62 21.0 104 5.1 25 27.2 134 P=0.000 P=0.048 P=0.001
45-55 406 15.3 62 41.1 167 16.0 65 20.9 85 5.2 21 25.7 104
Education(*)
No Schooling 256 12.5 32 38.5 99 5.1 13 16.4 42 3.9 10 22.6 58 x 2 =48.27 x 2 =15.15 x 2 =156.51 x=24.77 x 2 =39.73
Primary School 986 17.7 175 34.5 341 8.0 79 21.6 213 4.3 42 23.9 235 df=4 df=4 df=4 df=4 df=4
Secondary School 681 24.4 166 35.9 245 12.8 87 21.6 147 6.3 43 32.6 222 P=0.000 P=0.004 P=0.000 P=0.000 P=0.000
High School 381 29.7 113 42.8 163 24.7 94 24.7 94 8.1 31 36.7 140
University 92 34.8 32 50.0 46 43.5 40 26.1 24 15.2 14 41.3 38
PPI Index(*)
Poorest (0-24) 257 14.0 36 39.3 101 5.8 15 21.0 54 5.4 14 27.3 70 x 2 =11.22 x 2 =42.59
Poor (25-49) 939 21.6 203 36.9 347 9.6 90 20.5 193 5.4 51 28.1 264 df=3 df=3
Medium (50-74) 958 23.7 227 38.2 366 16.7 160 23.3 223 6.3 60 31.0 296 P=0.011 P=0.000
High (75-100) 242 21.5 52 33.1 80 19.8 48 20.7 50 6.2 15 26.0 63
Working Youth(*)
No 1896 21.1 400 39.7 753 13.9 263 21.9 415 5.8 109 28.4 537 x 2 =22.20 x 2 =5.17
Yes 500 23.6 118 28.2 141 10.0 50 21.0 105 6.2 31 31.2 156 df=1,P=0.000 df=1,P=0.023
Landowner(*)
No 300 18.7 56 27.7 83 10.7 32 17.7 53 3.7 11 23.2 69 x 2 =13.51 x 2 =5.38
Yes 2096 22.0 462 38.6 811 13.4 281 22.3 467 6.2 129 29.8 624 df=1,P=0.000 df=1,P=0.020
Occupation
Farmer 1094 18.1 198 38.7 424 8.7 95 22.1 242 5.6 61 26.6 291 X 2 =80.42
Business person 389 19.5 76 31.4 122 8.2 32 21.1 82 4.6 18 22.2 86 df=12
Sales and services 105 21.9 23 27.6 29 10.5 11 16.2 17 3.8 4 28.6 30 P=0.000
Skilled Manual 96 21.9 21 28.1 27 12.5 12 14.6 14 4.2 4 22.9 22 X 2 =76.37
Housework/housewife 141 15.6 22 27.7 39 6.5 9 21.4 30 2.1 3 28.4 40 df=12
Teacher 46 34.8 16 60.9 28 67.4 31 30.4 14 13.0 6 54.3 25 P=0.000
University Student 44 40.9 18 52.3 23 34.1 15 27.3 12 13.6 6 43.2 19 X 2 =62.30
Non-university student 249 38.6 96 41.2 103 18.4 46 22.8 57 8.4 21 40.2 100 df=12
Professional-technical-management 90 22.2 20 24.4 22 15.6 14 17.8 16 6.7 6 31.1 28 P=0.000
Government official 93 24.7 23 64.5 60 46.2 43 30.1 28 9.8 9 43.0 40
Forestry Worker 5 20.0 1 20.0 1 20.0 1 0.0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0
Coastal fisherman/woman 35 8.6 3 25.7 9 2.9 1 5.7 2 0.0 0 14.3 5
Freshwater fisherman/woman 35 2.9 1 45.7 16 8.6 3 25.7 9 5.9 2 28.6 10
Note:
A star (*) reports a significant relation betw een a demographic variable and dependent variable at 5% significance level.
Figures in bold represent cells w ith high positive, w hile those in bold italic represent high negative relation betw een both variables
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The Ministry of Environment commissioned the BBC World Service Trust to conduct the
study with the support of Danida, Oxfam, UNDP Cambodia.
The study reflects the views, opinions, and beliefs of the research correspondents. These
do not in any way reflect the views of the researchers and the Ministry of Environment
Ministry of Environment
Climate Change Department
#48, Preah Sihanouk Blvd.,
Chamkarmon, Phnom Penh,
CAMBODIA
Tel + 855 23 218 370
Fax + 855 23 218 370
www.camnet.com.kh/moe
www.camclimate.org.kh
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