What Drives Politicians to Act on Climate? A Field Experiment with Local Officials in Six Countries

Apr 6, 2022

Local governments play an important role addressing the climate crisis. However, despite public support for climate action, local policy response has been limited. We argue that (1) biased beliefs about voter preferences, (2) the time horizon for credit claiming, and (3) source credibility are barriers for legislators to learn and adopt new environmental policies. We test our arguments in a field experiment embedded in a real policy-learning context: a webinar on climate solutions for local politicians. Representatives from six Western countries received different versions of the webinar invitation. Constituency opinion on climate made local officeholders more likely to follow public preferences. Invitations sent by a climate scientist and emphasizing short-term policy effects also increased interest in the webinar but did not convert into policy commitments. Only US officials responded negatively to climate scientists. The results reveal concrete steps to induce climate action and contribute to scholarship on policy learning.

Publication details
Theme(s)
The urgency of zero
Type(s)
Report
Author(s)
Axelsson, Kaya
Year(s)
2022
OSF preprint

Latest news

Kaya Axelsson named one of the UK’s 100 most impactful sustainability leaders
Kaya Axelsson named one of the UK’s 100 most impactful sustainability leaders

We're delighted to announce that Kaya Axelsson, our Net Zero Policy Engagement Fellow, has been named by edie as one of the UK's 100 most impactful sustainability leaders. Edie is a prominent UK business, media and publishing network that ... Read more

Building Momentum on Serviced Emissions: Oxford Net Zero’s Client Workshops
Building Momentum on Serviced Emissions: Oxford Net Zero’s Client Workshops

By Siddharth Shekhar Yadav and Alexis McGivern.   How can client leadership across professional services help unlock credible net-zero progress? This question is at the heart of our upcoming workshop at the University of Oxford ... Read more

Oxford Net Zero marks five years and looks to the future
Oxford Net Zero marks five years and looks to the future

When Oxford Net Zero started in 2021, it was the very first programme to receive seed funding from the University's new Strategic Research Fund (SRF). Over the past five years, our programme has brought together researchers from across the ... Read more

See more news and events