Success of the 2015 Paris Agreement, which is founded on nationally determined contributions (NDCs), hinges on whether domestic support for international environmental agreements would be undermined if countries that are crucial to the global effort fail to reduce their emissions. Here we find that citizens in China (n = 3,000) and the United States (n = 3,007) have strong preferences over the design of international climate agreements and contributions of other countries to the global effort. However, contrary to what standard accounts of international politics would predict, a survey-embedded experiment in which respondents were randomly exposed to different information on other countries’ behaviour showed that information on other countr...
Under the Paris Agreement, parties self-determine their mitigation ambition level by submitting Nati...
When discussing strategies to address climate change, it has become almost a matter of habit to incl...
First published online: 11 February 2020Under the Paris Agreement, parties self-determine their miti...
Success of the 2015 Paris Agreement, which is founded on nationally determined contributions (NDCs),...
Replication Data for: Commitment-Failures Are Unlikely to Undermine Public Support for the Paris Agr...
When considering public support for domestic policies that contribute to a global public good, such ...
The Paris Agreement would not have come into being had China, the United States (US), and the Europe...
Climate change could be the single most important issue of our time. China and the United States sha...
<p>The adoption of the Paris Agreement in December 2015 moved the world a step closer to avoiding da...
With support from leaders from the world’s major economies, every nation in the world signed onto th...
Recent survey evidence from the United States suggests that most Americans support domestic policies...
The leaders of 189 nations have ratified the Paris Agreement, pledging to address climate change thr...
The Paris Agreement would not have come into being had China, the United States (US), and the Europe...
It is increasingly clear that the world would be better off with an international agreement to contr...
The adoption of the Paris Agreement in December 2015 moved the world a step closer to avoiding dange...
Under the Paris Agreement, parties self-determine their mitigation ambition level by submitting Nati...
When discussing strategies to address climate change, it has become almost a matter of habit to incl...
First published online: 11 February 2020Under the Paris Agreement, parties self-determine their miti...
Success of the 2015 Paris Agreement, which is founded on nationally determined contributions (NDCs),...
Replication Data for: Commitment-Failures Are Unlikely to Undermine Public Support for the Paris Agr...
When considering public support for domestic policies that contribute to a global public good, such ...
The Paris Agreement would not have come into being had China, the United States (US), and the Europe...
Climate change could be the single most important issue of our time. China and the United States sha...
<p>The adoption of the Paris Agreement in December 2015 moved the world a step closer to avoiding da...
With support from leaders from the world’s major economies, every nation in the world signed onto th...
Recent survey evidence from the United States suggests that most Americans support domestic policies...
The leaders of 189 nations have ratified the Paris Agreement, pledging to address climate change thr...
The Paris Agreement would not have come into being had China, the United States (US), and the Europe...
It is increasingly clear that the world would be better off with an international agreement to contr...
The adoption of the Paris Agreement in December 2015 moved the world a step closer to avoiding dange...
Under the Paris Agreement, parties self-determine their mitigation ambition level by submitting Nati...
When discussing strategies to address climate change, it has become almost a matter of habit to incl...
First published online: 11 February 2020Under the Paris Agreement, parties self-determine their miti...