Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-wg55d Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-05-09T21:59:33.481Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Why the impacts of climate change may make us less likely to reduce emissions

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 December 2022

Joel Millward-Hopkins*
Affiliation:
Sustainability Research Institute, School of Earth and Environment, University of Leeds, Leeds, UK
*
Author for correspondence: Joel Millward-Hopkins, E-mail: joeltmh@gmail.com

Abstract

Non-technical summary

A widely held belief is that once the impacts of warming are experienced more directly and substantially, especially by affluent populations, the necessary support for a politics prioritising ambitious emissions reductions will follow. But consideration of the indirect socioeconomic impacts of warming suggests this could be false hope.

Technical summary

There is some evidence to support the common intuition that, as the direct impacts of warming intensify – particularly in the affluent Global North – a politics ambitious enough to confront the climate emergency may finally find support. However, it seems at least equally likely that the opposite trend will prevail. This proposition can be understood by considering various indirect impacts of warming, including the widening of socioeconomic inequalities (within and between countries), increases in migration (intra- and inter-nationally) and heightened risk of conflict (from violence and war through to hate speech and crime). Compiling these impacts reveals a considerable and highly inconvenient overlap with key drivers of the authoritarian populism that has proliferated in the 21st century. It highlights the risk of a socio-ecological feedback loop where the consequences of warming create a political environment entirely at odds with that required to reduce emissions. Such a future is, of course, far from inevitable. Nonetheless, the risks highlight the urgent need to find public support for combined solutions to climate change and inequality, which go well beyond the status-quo. This is necessary not only for reasons of economic and climate justice, but in order to mitigate political barriers to carbon mitigation itself.

Social media summary

As the impacts of warming are experienced more directly and substantially, we may vote for precisely the wrong people.

Type
Intelligence Briefing
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2022. Published by Cambridge University Press

1. Introduction

What will happen once natural disasters, heatwaves, food shortages and other direct impacts of warming begin to more substantially affect affluent countries of the Global North and elsewhere – where per-person carbon footprints are highest, and global political and economic influence most concentrated? Will those political parties and climate policies that are ambitious and globally coordinated enough to confront the challenge of anthropogenic climate change finally find support?

There is some evidence that this is how things may play out (Baccini & Leemann, Reference Baccini and Leemann2021). However, while experiencing the direct impacts of warming – like natural disasters, heatwaves and food shortages – may increase public support for carbon mitigation, the indirect socioeconomic impacts of warming may push in precisely the opposite direction: they may turn our national political attentions inwards, disintegrating the global cooperation required for addressing climate change. This short article explains how this counterintuitive and troubling scenario could arise.

2. Mapping the indirect impacts of climate change

To understand this proposition, we must first link various direct physical impacts of warming to relevant socio-political effects, and map key interlinkages between the latter. How all this may influence the politics of climate mitigation is described in the subsequent section.

Central among these indirect effects is the widening of socioeconomic inequalities, both within and between countries, which can occur via numerous pathways. The literature on climate change and inequality is substantial and can broadly be divided into (i) that studying inequalities in contributions to emissions (i.e. the emissions attributable to given entities) and (ii) vulnerability to the negative impacts of warming (i.e. the potential to suffer from climate-driven environmental changes). Generally, more affluent populations have higher carbon and energy footprints (Bruckner et al., Reference Bruckner, Hubacek, Shan, Zhong and Feng2022; Chancel, Reference Chancel2021; Oswald et al., Reference Oswald, Owen and Steinberger2020; Piketty & Chancel, Reference Piketty and Chancel2015) and are primary drivers of investments in high-carbon activities (Ceddia, Reference Ceddia2020; Manych et al., Reference Manych, Steckel and Jakob2021), while simultaneously being less exposed to climate impacts and more able to adapt to (or recover from) the impacts they do suffer (Bathiany et al., Reference Bathiany, Dakos, Scheffer and Lenton2018; Byers et al., Reference Byers, Gidden, Leclère, Balkovic, Burek and Ebi2018; Levy & Patz, Reference Levy and Patz2015). Current inequalities are thus reflected in both contributions and vulnerability (IPCC, 2022). Absent political effort to the contrary, such inequalities will be further increased by warming (King & Harrington, Reference King and Harrington2018; Shiogama et al., Reference Shiogama, Hasegawa, Fujimori, Murakami, Takahashi and Tanaka2019), with poorer populations trapped in a vicious cycle where current inequalities leave them suffering disproportionately from climate impacts (Cappelli et al., Reference Cappelli, Costantini and Consoli2021; Islam & Winkel, Reference Islam and Winkel2017). In contrast, affluent populations on the coast, in the forest or the city can relocate, smoke-proof their homes from wildfires, hire private firefighters or install air conditioning. At the apex of this trend are the billionaires purchasing survival bunkers in New Zealand.

Another critical socioeconomic effect of warming relates to migration. The World Bank estimate that, without concerted mitigation action, the number of within-country climate migrants could exceed 200 million by 2050 (Clement et al., Reference Clement, Rigaud, de Sherbinin, Jones, Adamo and Schewe2021) – and this estimate omits extreme weather events like cyclones. The number of international climate migrants is expected to be significantly smaller and quantitative estimates don't yet exist (IPCC, 2022), due largely to the multi-casual nature of migration (Black et al., Reference Black, Adger, Arnell, Dercon, Geddes and Thomas2011). Complicating factors include the speed of onset of climate impacts: ruptures like cyclones can leave people involuntary immobile – without the resources necessary for migration to even remain an option – while slow-onset events such as prolonged droughts induce relatively more international migration (Kaczan & Orgill-Meyer, Reference Kaczan and Orgill-Meyer2020). Glossing over this complexity, academic, policy and public discourses on climate migration have tended to frame predictions of mass migration from the Global South to the Global North as the consensus view (Boas et al., Reference Boas, Farbotko, Adams, Sterly, Bush and van der Geest2019). Such alarmism has been cautioned against due to the potential for it to bolster securitisation discourses, xenophobia and support for harder borders (Bettini, Reference Bettini2013). Nonetheless, there is evidence that warming can have a significant effect on international migration to rich countries (Coniglio & Pesce, Reference Coniglio and Pesce2015) – a trend likely to continue as warming increases if border policies in wealthier countries allow (McLeman, Reference McLeman2019). Overall then, while the debate is highly contested – and complexity may continue to prohibit quantitative projections – there are various direct and indirect pathways through which warming could substantially increase international migration. This is made more salient given that, within fifty years, over a billion people in the Global South may find themselves in climatic conditions warmer than anywhere today (Xu et al., Reference Xu, Kohler, Lenton, Svenning and Scheffer2020), with a subset of these exposed to heatwaves that humans simply cannot survive (Raymond et al., Reference Raymond, Matthews and Horton2020).

Other indirect impacts of warming are the greater risk of intergroup conflict, for example, over basic resources such as water (Hsiang et al., Reference Hsiang, Burke and Miguel2013); increased interpersonal violence and crime during high-temperature periods (Mares & Moffett, Reference Mares and Moffett2016; Miles-Novelo & Anderson, Reference Miles-Novelo and Anderson2019); and increased economic instability due to economic damages caused by warming and stranded assets (Burke et al., Reference Burke, Davis and Diffenbaugh2018). Like migration, the relationship between warming and conflict has been fiercely debated (Barnett, Reference Barnett2018), in large part because pre-existing social, economic and political factors are the dominant causal factors. The influence of warming on the Syrian war is particularly contested, with some arguing that it played a negligible role (Selby et al., Reference Selby, Dahi, Fröhlich and Hulme2017). It has thus been argued that when these wider factors are crowded out of debates, it risks inappropriate militarised and securitised solutions being employed (Gleditsch, Reference Gleditsch2012). Nonetheless, there is a growing consensus that warming is a risk factor in armed conflict, violence, hate speech and crime (Burke et al., Reference Burke, Hsiang and Miguel2015; Mach et al., Reference Mach, Kraan, Adger, Buhaug, Burke and Fearon2019; Stechemesser et al., Reference Stechemesser, Levermann and Wenz2022).

Finally, there are various direct and indirect interlinkages (Figure 1). Economic instability may further increase inequalities, if the political response is such that the poorest are hit hardest by financial crisis while the affluent find ways to profit. Climate-related increases in economic inequalities may further increase the number of climate-related migrants if poorer populations in poorer countries struggle to secure reasonable standards of living (Kikstra et al., Reference Kikstra, Mastrucci, Min, Riahi and Rao2021) while affluent countries become more attractive destinations (McLeman, Reference McLeman2019). Larger inequalities between countries may also add to the risk of violent conflict if the ability of poorer countries to secure access to basic resources like water and food is further compromised; conflicts which could add yet further to international migration. Finally, larger within-country inequalities are well-known to increase the prevalence of interpersonal violence and other crime (Wilkinson & Pickett, Reference Wilkinson and Pickett2011).

Figure 1. Illustration of the direct impacts of climate change (black box), some indirect effects of this warming (grey boxes), interlinkages between indirect effects, the politics these effects may catalyse (red boxes) and how this may present barriers to mitigation. Note, the figure illustrates the ways that climate change may influence inequality, nationalism, etc., but it's not intended to capture other influences upon these beyond warming.

3. Authoritarian populism and climate impacts

This seemingly disparate collection of climate impacts has been laid out due to their association with factors contributing to the rise of nationalist, authoritarian populist leaders across Europe, the USA, Brazil and elsewhere in the 21st century (Norris & Inglehart, Reference Norris and Inglehart2019). The literature on this subject is extensive and evolving. However, it is broadly accepted that three important factors in the rise of authoritarian parties have been: discontent with levels of immigration (Edo et al., Reference Edo, Giesing, Öztunc and Poutvaara2019) in all but the most urban areas (Dustmann et al., Reference Dustmann, Vasiljeva and Piil Damm2018); persistent economic inequality, insecurity and disadvantage (Inglehart & Norris, Reference Inglehart and Norris2017; Rodríguez-Pose, Reference Rodríguez-Pose2018), which is often framed as resulting from globalisation (Rodrik, Reference Rodrik2021); and fears about both global security (Homolar & Scholz, Reference Homolar and Scholz2019; Wright & Esses, Reference Wright and Esses2019) and local crime (Burscher et al., Reference Burscher, van Spanje and de Vreese2015; Dinas & van Spanje, Reference Dinas and van Spanje2011).

Potential interlinkages between climate impacts and politics can now be sketched out, and the way the former may foster authoritarian populism can be mapped (Figure 1). But various provisos must be acknowledged here. First, there are deeper interrelations, especially in discourse – for example, populist leaders often attempt to link immigrants to crime and job insecurity, and public fears are deeply connected (Dinas & van Spanje, Reference Dinas and van Spanje2011). Second, researchers have emphasised the largely separate role of cultural backlash in driving contemporary populism (Norris & Inglehart, Reference Norris and Inglehart2019). Third, the strength of some interlinkages may be weak. For example, it's been suggested that crime rates in the USA may rise ~1–5% this century due to warming (Burke et al., Reference Burke, Hsiang and Miguel2015) – this may have at most a marginal effect on support for populism, not to mention that other socioeconomic factors influence crime rates far more strongly. Most importantly, this analysis should not be taken as environmental determinism, but rather as suggesting one potential future with no specified likelihood.

Nevertheless, the fundamental point is that we should take seriously the considerable overlap between key socio-political impacts of climate change – within which socioeconomic inequalities are central – and key factors underpinning the rise of nationalist, authoritarian politics. Similar concerns have been highlighted by others: some warn of the danger of a fossil fascism that exploits the climate crisis by feeding upon anti-immigration sentiments and promising to aggressively defend the privileges of the Global North (Malm & Collective, Reference Malm and Collective2021); others of the multi-scale fortress mentality that environmental insecurity can provoke (White, Reference White2014). More broadly, such nationalism is precisely the type of politics underpinning the resurgent nationalism that characterises the IPCC's most pessimistic SSP3 pathway (Fujimori et al., Reference Fujimori, Hasegawa, Masui, Takahashi, Herran and Dai2017), where mitigation and adaptation challenges are highest, and keeping temperature rise below 2 °C becomes almost infeasible.

3.1 Mitigating political barriers to mitigation

The scenario described above is a socio-ecological feedback loop, where the consequences of warming create a political environment at odds with the global cooperation – and internal, national cohesion – required to confront climate change. To many, this may appear counterintuitive. It is often thought that once the impacts of warming are experienced directly and substantially in more affluent regions, the necessary support for parties and policies prioritising ambitious mitigation will follow. But the current analysis argues that the indirect impacts of warming – migration, inequality, conflict, etc. – may push in precisely the opposite direction. These impacts may push towards a world characterised by leaders like Trump, Putin, Bolsanaro and other right-wing populists: strong men who are typically hostile to climate policies such as carbon pricing; supportive of traditional industries like coal mining; personally connected to fossil fuel companies; inclined to prioritise obstructing immigration and other national interests over global challenges; sceptical of anthropogenic climate change itself, or in outright denial; and reliant upon a narrative of dividing the world into us vs them (Lockwood, Reference Lockwood2018; Malm & Collective, Reference Malm and Collective2021). Their goal to return to accelerated fossil fuel extractivism, denial of the ecological catastrophes this would cause or – at least, denying the necessity of action (Lamb et al., Reference Lamb, Mattioli, Levi, Roberts, Capstick and Creutzig2020) – and frequent explicit sexism, marks them out as embodiments of what has been called petro-masculinity (Daggett, Reference Daggett2018).

This is a bleak vision, especially for the climate migrants likely to be faced with hard borders (McLeman, Reference McLeman2019). But we must reiterate that the future remains open. The scenario proposed above is offered as a warning, not a forecast, and the tendencies it describes could be overshadowed by other political and social factors here. Put another way, Figure 1 doesn't claim to be exhaustive of all the feedbacks between warming and politics. An obvious missing link is that experiencing the direct impacts of warming (flooding, etc.) may push people to vote for politicians that are serious about mitigating climate change – the intuitive feedback that this article challenges (but doesn't deny). Another is the way that cooperative forms of nationalism could potentially bolster climate action (Lieven, Reference Lieven2020). Nonetheless, the potential for warming to instead intensify authoritarian populism should be taken seriously, given the risks – given that climate change is now considered a global emergency (Ripple et al., Reference Ripple, Wolf, Newsome, Barnard and Moomaw2019). Here, interactions between warming and socioeconomic inequalities are key.

There are already substantive moral reasons for addressing such inequalities, particularly as they relate to climate change, easily summarised by the fact that those contributing the least are likely to suffer the most harms. The linkages between redistribution and mitigation potential remain contested (Oswald et al., Reference Oswald, Steinberger, Ivanova and Millward-Hopkins2021; Rao & Min, Reference Rao and Min2018; Scherer et al., Reference Scherer, Behrens, de Koning, Heijungs, Sprecher and Tukker2018). However, it's been suggested that decent living standards could be provided globally to all for well under 50% of today's energy use (Millward-Hopkins et al., Reference Millward-Hopkins, Steinberger, Rao and Oswald2020), provided material inequalities are dramatically reduced (Millward-Hopkins, Reference Millward-Hopkins2022); an enormous challenge, requiring both political and ideological transformation (Millward-Hopkins, Reference Millward-Hopkins2021). The current work adds weight to these moral arguments for reducing inequalities by highlighting the risks to climate action (Green & Healy, Reference Green and Healy2022). Further, reducing inequality – via inclusive economic institutions and providing social protections, etc. – is also essential for building climate-resilient peace (Barnett, Reference Barnett2018). Fortunately, climate policies can easily be designed with equality, justice and sustainable development in mind (Hickel et al., Reference Hickel, Brockway, Kallis, Keyßer, Lenzen and Slameršak2021). This requires focusing upon international climate finance, carbon taxes with redistribution of revenues, universal access to modern energy, compensation for loss and damages, among other things (Bertram et al., Reference Bertram, Luderer, Popp, Minx, Lamb and Stevanović2018). Implementing such policies could avoid the distributional issues that have often accompanied climate policies in the past, while facilitating ambitious emissions reductions (Soergel et al., Reference Soergel, Kriegler, Weindl, Rauner, Dirnaichner and Ruhe2021).

The key question is how such policies can find the political support. Both global and national redistribution is essential, but in wealthy countries, sufficient support for the former won't be found while national inequalities remain so high that large numbers of people feel left behind. In the USA, UK and elsewhere, political leaders on the left that endeavoured to seriously address carbon emissions and economic inequalities have lost to right-wing rivals in recent years. The major climate and anti-racist social movements that have emerged have struggled to unify class and racial interests. This is partially as the backdrop of the Culture Wars has left issues of climate and economic inequality tied up with unrelated, yet polarising political topics like abortion, gender and transsexual rights, and this divisiveness has been exploited effectively by populist movements. Achieving a broad public consensus on climate action and redistribution is thus a critical challenge – for social movements, political parties and all those in between – as combined solutions that go well beyond the status-quo are urgently needed, not only for climate justice, but in order to mitigate political barriers to carbon mitigation itself.

Acknowledgments

This research was supported through a Leverhulme Trust Research Leadership Award granted to Julia Steinberger's Living Well Within Limits (LiLi) project (RL2016-048). The author would also like to thank Narasimha Rao, Laura Smith, Yannick Oswald and Julia Steinberger for invaluable feedback on preliminary drafts.

Author contributions

JMH conceived and wrote the article.

Financial support

The research was supported through a Leverhulme Trust Research Leadership Award granted to Julia Steinberger's Living Well Within Limits (LiLi) project (RL2016-048).

Conflict of interest

None.

Research transparency

Not applicable.

Reproducibility

Not applicable.

References

Baccini, L., & Leemann, L. (2021). Do natural disasters help the environment? How voters respond and what that means. Political Science Research and Methods, 9(3), 468484. https://doi.org/10.1017/psrm.2020.25.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barnett, J. (2018). Global environmental change I: Climate resilient peace? Progress in Human Geography, 43(5), 927936. 10.1177/0309132518798077.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bathiany, S., Dakos, V., Scheffer, M., & Lenton, T. M. (2018). Climate models predict increasing temperature variability in poor countries. Science Advances, 4(5), eaar5809. https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.aar5809.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Bertram, C., Luderer, G., Popp, A., Minx, J. C., Lamb, W. F., Stevanović, M., Humpenöder, F., Giannousakis, A., & Kriegler, E. (2018). Targeted policies can compensate most of the increased sustainability risks in 1.5 °C mitigation scenarios. Environmental Research Letters, 13(6), 064038. https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/aac3ec.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bettini, G. (2013). Climate Barbarians at the Gate? A critique of apocalyptic narratives on ‘climate refugees’. Geoforum, 45, 6372. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.geoforum.2012.09.009.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Black, R., Adger, W. N., Arnell, N. W., Dercon, S., Geddes, A., & Thomas, D. (2011). The effect of environmental change on human migration. Global Environmental Change, 21, S3S11. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2011.10.001.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Boas, I., Farbotko, C., Adams, H., Sterly, H., Bush, S., van der Geest, K., Wiegel, H., Ashraf, H., Baldwin, A., Bettini, G., Blondin, S., de Bruijn, M., Durand-Delacre, D., Fröhlich, C., Gioli, G., Guaita, L., Hut, E., Jarawura, F., & Lamers, M. (2019). Climate migration myths. Nature Climate Change, 9(12), 901903. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41558-019-0633-3.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bruckner, B., Hubacek, K., Shan, Y., Zhong, H., & Feng, K. (2022). Impacts of poverty alleviation on national and global carbon emissions. Nature Sustainability, 5, 311320. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41893-021-00842-z.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Burke, M., Davis, W. M., & Diffenbaugh, N. S. (2018). Large potential reduction in economic damages under UN mitigation targets. Nature, 557(7706), 549553. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-018-0071-9.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Burke, M., Hsiang, S. M., & Miguel, E. (2015). Climate and Conflict. Annual Review of Economics, 7(1), 577617. https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev-economics-080614-115430.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Burscher, B., van Spanje, J., & de Vreese, C. H. (2015). Owning the issues of crime and immigration: The relation between immigration and crime news and anti-immigrant voting in 11 countries. Electoral Studies, 38, 5969. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.electstud.2015.03.001.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Byers, E., Gidden, M., Leclère, D., Balkovic, J., Burek, P., Ebi, K., Greve, P., Grey, D., Havlik, P., Hillers, A., Johnson, N., Kahil, T., Krey, V., Langan, S., Nakicenovic, N., Novak, R., Obersteiner, M., Pachauri, S., & Palazzo, A. (2018). Global exposure and vulnerability to multi-sector development and climate change hotspots. Environmental Research Letters, 13(5), 055012. https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/aabf45.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cappelli, F., Costantini, V., & Consoli, D. (2021). The trap of climate change-induced ‘natural’ disasters and inequality. Global Environmental Change, 70, 102329. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2021.102329.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ceddia, M. G. (2020). The super-rich and cropland expansion via direct investments in agriculture. Nature Sustainability, 3(4), 312318. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41893-020-0480-2.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chancel, L. (2021). Climate change & the global inequality of carbon emissions, 1990-2020. Paris School of Economics: World Inequality Lab.Google Scholar
Clement, V., Rigaud, K. K., de Sherbinin, A., Jones, B., Adamo, S., Schewe, J., Sadiq, N., & Shabahat, E. (2021). Groundswell part 2: Acting on internal climate migration. The World Bank.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Coniglio, N. D., & Pesce, G. (2015). Climate variability and international migration: An empirical analysis. Environment and Development Economics, 20(4), 434468. https://doi.org/10.1017/S1355770X14000722.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Daggett, C. (2018). Petro-masculinity: Fossil fuels and authoritarian desire. Millennium, 47(1), 2544. https://doi.org/10.1177/0305829818775817.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dinas, E., & van Spanje, J. (2011). Crime story: The role of crime and immigration in the anti-immigration vote. Electoral Studies, 30(4), 658671, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.electstud.2011.06.010.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dustmann, C., Vasiljeva, K., & Piil Damm, A. (2018). Refugee migration and electoral outcomes. The Review of Economic Studies, 86(5), 20352091. https://doi.org/10.1093/restud/rdy047.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Edo, A., Giesing, Y., Öztunc, J., & Poutvaara, P. (2019). Immigration and electoral support for the far-left and the far-right. European Economic Review, 115, 99143. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.euroecorev.2019.03.001.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fujimori, S., Hasegawa, T., Masui, T., Takahashi, K., Herran, D. S., Dai, H., Hijioka, Y., & Kainuma, M. (2017). SSP3: AIM implementation of shared socioeconomic pathways. Global Environmental Change, 42, 268283. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2016.06.009.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gleditsch, N. P. (2012). Whither the weather? Climate change and conflict. Journal of Peace Research, 49(1), 39. https://doi.org/10.1177/0022343311431288.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Green, F., & Healy, N. (2022). How inequality fuels climate change: The climate case for a Green New Deal. One Earth, 5(6), 635649. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.oneear.2022.05.005.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hickel, J., Brockway, P., Kallis, G., Keyßer, L., Lenzen, M., Slameršak, A., Steinberger, J., & Ürge-Vorsatz, D. (2021). Urgent need for post-growth climate mitigation scenarios. Nature Energy, 6, 766768. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41560-021-00884-9.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Homolar, A., & Scholz, R. (2019). The power of Trump-speak: Populist crisis narratives and ontological security. Cambridge Review of International Affairs, 32(3), 344364. https://doi.org/10.1080/09557571.2019.1575796.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hsiang, S. M., Burke, M., & Miguel, E. (2013). Quantifying the influence of climate on human conflict. Science, 341(6151), 1235367. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1235367.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Inglehart, R., & Norris, P. (2017). Trump and the populist authoritarian parties: The silent revolution in reverse. Perspectives on Politics, 15(2), 443454. https://doi.org/10.1017/S1537592717000111.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
IPCC. (2022). Climate change 2022: Impacts, adaptation, and vulnerability. Contribution of Working Group II to the Sixth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Islam, N., & Winkel, J. (2017). Climate change and social inequality. Department of Economic & Social Affairs Working Paper No. 152. https://doi.org/10.18356/2c62335d-en.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kaczan, D. J., & Orgill-Meyer, J. (2020). The impact of climate change on migration: A synthesis of recent empirical insights. Climatic Change, 158(3), 281300. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10584-019-02560-0.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kikstra, J. S., Mastrucci, A., Min, J., Riahi, K., & Rao, N. D. (2021). Decent living gaps and energy needs around the world. Environmental Research Letters, 16, 095006.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
King, A., & Harrington, L. (2018). The inequality of climate change from 1.5 to 2 °C of global warming. Geophysical Research Letters, 45(10), 50305033. https://doi.org/10.1029/2018GL078430.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lamb, W. F., Mattioli, G., Levi, S., Roberts, J. T., Capstick, S., Creutzig, F., Minx, J. C., Müller-Hansen, F., Culhane, T., & Steinberger, J. (2020). Discourses of climate delay. Global Sustainability, 3, e17. https://doi.org/10.1017/sus.2020.13.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Levy, B. S., & Patz, J. A. (2015). Climate change, human rights, and social justice. Annals of Global Health, 81(3), 310322. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.aogh.2015.08.008.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lieven, A. (2020). Climate change and the nation state: The case for nationalism in a warming world. Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Lockwood, M. (2018). Right-wing populism and the climate change agenda: Exploring the linkages. Environmental Politics, 27(4), 712732. https://doi.org/10.1080/09644016.2018.1458411.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mach, K. J., Kraan, C. M., Adger, W. N., Buhaug, H., Burke, M., Fearon, J. D., Field, C., Hendrix, C., Maystadt, J., O’Loughlin, J., Roessler, P., Scheffran, J., Schultz, K., & Uexkull, N. (2019). Climate as a risk factor for armed conflict. Nature, 571(7764), 193197. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-019-1300-6.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Malm, A., & Collective, T. Z. (2021). White skin, black fuel: On the danger of fossil fascism. Verso Books.Google Scholar
Manych, N., Steckel, J. C., & Jakob, M. (2021). Finance-based accounting of coal emissions. Environmental Research Letters, 16(4), 044028. https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/abd972.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mares, D. M., & Moffett, K. W. (2016). Climate change and interpersonal violence: A ‘global’ estimate and regional inequities. Climatic Change, 135(2), 297310. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10584-015-1566-0.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McLeman, R. (2019). International migration and climate adaptation in an era of hardening borders. Nature Climate Change, 9(12), 911918. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41558-019-0634-2.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Miles-Novelo, A., & Anderson, C. A. (2019). Climate change and psychology: Effects of rapid global warming on violence and aggression. Current Climate Change Reports, 5(1), 3646. https://doi.org/10.1007/s40641-019-00121-2.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Millward-Hopkins, J. (2021). Back to the future: Old values for a new (more equal) world. Futures, 128, 102727. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.futures.2021.102727.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Millward-Hopkins, J. (2022). Inequality can double the energy required to secure universal decent living. Nature Communications, 13(1), 5028. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-022-32729-8.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Millward-Hopkins, J., Steinberger, J. K., Rao, N. D., & Oswald, Y. (2020). Providing decent living with minimum energy: A global scenario. Global Environmental Change, 65, 102168. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2020.102168.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Norris, P., & Inglehart, R. (2019). Cultural backlash: Trump, Brexit, and authoritarian populism. Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Oswald, Y., Owen, A., & Steinberger, J. (2020). Large inequality in international and intranational energy footprints between income groups and across consumption categories. Nature Energy, 5, 231239.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Oswald, Y., Steinberger, J., Ivanova, D., & Millward-Hopkins, J. (2021). Global redistribution of income and household energy footprints: A computational thought experiment. Global Sustainability, 4, 124. https://doi.org/10.1017/sus.2021.1.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Piketty, T., & Chancel, L. (2015). Carbon and inequality: From Kyoto to Paris. Paris: Paris School of Economics.Google Scholar
Rao, N. D., & Min, J. (2018). Less global inequality can improve climate outcomes. Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Climate Change, 9(2), e513. https://doi.org/10.1002/wcc.513.Google Scholar
Raymond, C., Matthews, T., & Horton, R. M. (2020). The emergence of heat and humidity too severe for human tolerance. Science Advances, 6(19), eaaw1838. https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.aaw1838.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Ripple, W. J., Wolf, C., Newsome, T. M., Barnard, P., & Moomaw, W. R. (2019). World scientists’ warning of a climate emergency. BioScience, 70(1), 812. https://doi.org/10.1093/biosci/biz088.Google Scholar
Rodríguez-Pose, A. (2018). The revenge of the places that don't matter (and what to do about it). Cambridge Journal of Regions, Economy and Society, 11(1), 189209. https://doi.org/10.1093/cjres/rsx024.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rodrik, D. (2021). Why does globalization fuel populism? Economics, culture, and the rise of right-wing populism. Annual Review of Economics, 13(1), 133170. https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev-economics-070220-032416.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Scherer, L., Behrens, P., de Koning, A., Heijungs, R., Sprecher, B., & Tukker, A. (2018). Trade-offs between social and environmental sustainable development goals. Environmental Science & Policy, 90, 6572. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envsci.2018.10.002.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Selby, J., Dahi, O. S., Fröhlich, C., & Hulme, M. (2017). Climate change and the Syrian civil war revisited. Political Geography, 60, 232244. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.polgeo.2017.05.007.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shiogama, H., Hasegawa, T., Fujimori, S., Murakami, D., Takahashi, K., Tanaka, K., Emori, S., Kubota, I., Abe, M., Imada, Y., Watanabe, M., Mitchell, D., Schaller, N., Sillmann, J., Fischer, E., Scinocca, J., Bethke, I., Lierhammer, L., Takakura, J., Trautmann, T., Döll, P., Ostberg, S., Schmied, H. M., Saeed, F., & Schleussner, C. (2019). Limiting global warming to 1.5 °C will lower increases in inequalities of four hazard indicators of climate change. Environmental Research Letters, 14(12), 124022. https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/ab5256.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Soergel, B., Kriegler, E., Weindl, I., Rauner, S., Dirnaichner, A., Ruhe, C., Hofmann, M., Bauer, N., Bertram, C., Bodirsky, B., Leimbach, M., Leininger, J., Levesque, A., Luderer, G., Pehl, M., Wingens, C., Baumstark, L., Beier, F., & Dietrich, J. P. (2021). A sustainable development pathway for climate action within the UN 2030 Agenda. Nature Climate Change, 11(8), 656664. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41558-021-01098-3.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stechemesser, A., Levermann, A., & Wenz, L. (2022). Temperature impacts on hate speech online: Evidence from 4 billion geolocated tweets from the USA. The Lancet Planetary Health, 6(9), e714e725. https://doi.org/10.1016/S2542-5196(22)00173-5.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
White, R. (2014). Environmental insecurity and fortress mentality. International Affairs, 90(4), 835851.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wilkinson, R., & Pickett, K. (2011). The spirit level. Bloomsbury Publishing.Google Scholar
Wright, J. D., & Esses, V. M. (2019). It's security, stupid! Voters’ perceptions of immigrants as a security risk predicted support for Donald Trump in the 2016 US presidential election. Journal of Applied Social Psychology, 49(1), 3649. https://doi.org/10.1111/jasp.12563.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Xu, C., Kohler, T. A., Lenton, T. M., Svenning, J.-C., & Scheffer, M. (2020). Future of the human climate niche. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 117(21), 11350. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1910114117.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Figure 0

Figure 1. Illustration of the direct impacts of climate change (black box), some indirect effects of this warming (grey boxes), interlinkages between indirect effects, the politics these effects may catalyse (red boxes) and how this may present barriers to mitigation. Note, the figure illustrates the ways that climate change may influence inequality, nationalism, etc., but it's not intended to capture other influences upon these beyond warming.