Green for the Right reasons? How government ideology shapes preferences over climate change negotiations in the Global South
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Yamin, Patricio
Date:
2023Abstract
Research on the drivers of foreign policy regarding climate change negotiations
has extensively delved into the effects of risks and mitigation costs, as well as the
relevance of interest groups such as civil society organizations or carbon-intensive
industries. However, the role of governments’ ideological orientation has been neglected in most quantitative studies. Building upon an original dataset consisting
of 1194 statements at the Conference of the Parties within multilateral climate
change negotiations from 2010 to 2018, this paper addresses the impact of government ideology on the negotiating position of developing countries. Despite previous
academic work that assert that left-wing governments are more likely to adopt
pro-environment stances, I argue that this is only the case in developed countries.
Results suggest that the effect of ideology is different in the Global South, where
right-wing pluralist governments are more likely to adopt ambitious positions in
climate change negotiations than left-wing executives as well as populist leaders.
URI:
https://repositorio.utdt.edu/handle/20.500.13098/12019https://doi.org/10.33774/apsa-2023-pkdsg