Abstract This article explores the hypothesis that global inequality may be a central impediment to interstate cooperation on climate change policy. Conventional wisdom suggests that outcomes in international environmental politics are primarily attributable to material self-interest, bargaining power, coercion, domestic environmental values, exogenous shocks and crises, the existence of salient policy solutions, the strength of political leadership and the influence of nonstate actors. Yet none of these approaches offers a completely satisfactory explanation for the long-standing north-south divide on climate change. Drawing on social inequality literature and international relations theory, we argue that inequality dampens cooperative eff...
We empirically assess how both between-country inequality and within-country inequality relate to cl...
The Paris Agreement and the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) set ambitious targets for environme...
In descriptions of a just transition to a sustainable future, ensuring a decent quality of life whil...
The article examines the changing nature of politics in the United Nations climate negotiations thro...
In this paper, we analyze the response of the future world’s carbon stock to a reduction in global i...
Benefit-cost analyses of climate policies by integrated assessment models have generated conflicting...
International efforts to provide global public goods often face the challenges of coordinating natio...
This article seeks to answer why North–South climate negotiations have gone on for decades without p...
International efforts to provide global public goods often face the challenges of coordinating natio...
Is inequality within countries relevant for global climate policy? Most burden-sharing proposals for...
In this paper, we extend the Fehr and Schmidt model of inequality aversion to a situation where the ...
International efforts to provide global public goods often face the challenges of coordinating natio...
Based on unique data from a world-wide survey of agents involved in international climate policy, th...
We empirically assess how both between-country inequality and within-country inequality relate to cl...
The Paris Agreement and the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) set ambitious targets for environme...
In descriptions of a just transition to a sustainable future, ensuring a decent quality of life whil...
The article examines the changing nature of politics in the United Nations climate negotiations thro...
In this paper, we analyze the response of the future world’s carbon stock to a reduction in global i...
Benefit-cost analyses of climate policies by integrated assessment models have generated conflicting...
International efforts to provide global public goods often face the challenges of coordinating natio...
This article seeks to answer why North–South climate negotiations have gone on for decades without p...
International efforts to provide global public goods often face the challenges of coordinating natio...
Is inequality within countries relevant for global climate policy? Most burden-sharing proposals for...
In this paper, we extend the Fehr and Schmidt model of inequality aversion to a situation where the ...
International efforts to provide global public goods often face the challenges of coordinating natio...
Based on unique data from a world-wide survey of agents involved in international climate policy, th...
We empirically assess how both between-country inequality and within-country inequality relate to cl...
The Paris Agreement and the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) set ambitious targets for environme...
In descriptions of a just transition to a sustainable future, ensuring a decent quality of life whil...