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Cooperation studies of catastrophe avoidance: implications for climate negotiations

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Cooperation studies of catastrophe avoidance: implications for climate negotiations. / Hurlstone, Mark John; Wang, Susie ; Price, Annabel et al.
In: Climatic Change, Vol. 140, 01.01.2017, p. 119-133.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Hurlstone, MJ, Wang, S, Price, A, Leviston, Z & Walker, I 2017, 'Cooperation studies of catastrophe avoidance: implications for climate negotiations', Climatic Change, vol. 140, pp. 119-133. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10584-016-1838-3

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Vancouver

Hurlstone MJ, Wang S, Price A, Leviston Z, Walker I. Cooperation studies of catastrophe avoidance: implications for climate negotiations. Climatic Change. 2017 Jan 1;140:119-133. doi: 10.1007/s10584-016-1838-3

Author

Hurlstone, Mark John ; Wang, Susie ; Price, Annabel et al. / Cooperation studies of catastrophe avoidance : implications for climate negotiations. In: Climatic Change. 2017 ; Vol. 140. pp. 119-133.

Bibtex

@article{cd0db1389f7c44b08a0884286c6f0bf4,
title = "Cooperation studies of catastrophe avoidance: implications for climate negotiations",
abstract = "The landmark agreement recently negotiated in Paris represents an ambitious plan to combat climate change. Nevertheless, countries{\textquoteright} current climate pledges are insufficient to achieve the agreement{\textquoteright}s goal of keeping global mean temperature rise “well below” 2 ∘C. It is apparent that climate negotiators need to be equipped with additional strategies for fostering cooperation if a climate catastrophe is to be averted. We review the results arising from an emerging literature in which the problem of avoiding dangerous climate change has been simulated using cooperation experiments in which individuals play a game requiring collective action to avert a catastrophe. This literature has uncovered five key variables that influence the likelihood of avoiding disaster: (1) the perceived risk of collective failure, (2) inequalities in historical responsibility, wealth, and risk exposure, (3) uncertainty surrounding the threshold for catastrophe, (4) intergenerational discounting, and (5) the prospect of reward or punishment based on reputation. Along with the results of a recent experimental assessment of the key instruments of the Paris Agreement, we consider how knowledge of the effects of these variables might be harnessed by climate negotiators to improve the prospects of reaching a solution to global climate change.",
author = "Hurlstone, {Mark John} and Susie Wang and Annabel Price and Zoe Leviston and Iain Walker",
year = "2017",
month = jan,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1007/s10584-016-1838-3",
language = "English",
volume = "140",
pages = "119--133",
journal = "Climatic Change",
issn = "0165-0009",
publisher = "Springer Netherlands",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Cooperation studies of catastrophe avoidance

T2 - implications for climate negotiations

AU - Hurlstone, Mark John

AU - Wang, Susie

AU - Price, Annabel

AU - Leviston, Zoe

AU - Walker, Iain

PY - 2017/1/1

Y1 - 2017/1/1

N2 - The landmark agreement recently negotiated in Paris represents an ambitious plan to combat climate change. Nevertheless, countries’ current climate pledges are insufficient to achieve the agreement’s goal of keeping global mean temperature rise “well below” 2 ∘C. It is apparent that climate negotiators need to be equipped with additional strategies for fostering cooperation if a climate catastrophe is to be averted. We review the results arising from an emerging literature in which the problem of avoiding dangerous climate change has been simulated using cooperation experiments in which individuals play a game requiring collective action to avert a catastrophe. This literature has uncovered five key variables that influence the likelihood of avoiding disaster: (1) the perceived risk of collective failure, (2) inequalities in historical responsibility, wealth, and risk exposure, (3) uncertainty surrounding the threshold for catastrophe, (4) intergenerational discounting, and (5) the prospect of reward or punishment based on reputation. Along with the results of a recent experimental assessment of the key instruments of the Paris Agreement, we consider how knowledge of the effects of these variables might be harnessed by climate negotiators to improve the prospects of reaching a solution to global climate change.

AB - The landmark agreement recently negotiated in Paris represents an ambitious plan to combat climate change. Nevertheless, countries’ current climate pledges are insufficient to achieve the agreement’s goal of keeping global mean temperature rise “well below” 2 ∘C. It is apparent that climate negotiators need to be equipped with additional strategies for fostering cooperation if a climate catastrophe is to be averted. We review the results arising from an emerging literature in which the problem of avoiding dangerous climate change has been simulated using cooperation experiments in which individuals play a game requiring collective action to avert a catastrophe. This literature has uncovered five key variables that influence the likelihood of avoiding disaster: (1) the perceived risk of collective failure, (2) inequalities in historical responsibility, wealth, and risk exposure, (3) uncertainty surrounding the threshold for catastrophe, (4) intergenerational discounting, and (5) the prospect of reward or punishment based on reputation. Along with the results of a recent experimental assessment of the key instruments of the Paris Agreement, we consider how knowledge of the effects of these variables might be harnessed by climate negotiators to improve the prospects of reaching a solution to global climate change.

U2 - 10.1007/s10584-016-1838-3

DO - 10.1007/s10584-016-1838-3

M3 - Journal article

VL - 140

SP - 119

EP - 133

JO - Climatic Change

JF - Climatic Change

SN - 0165-0009

ER -