Local Warming, Local Economic Growth, and Local Change in Democratic Culture

March 2, 2011
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In a 104-nation study we first demonstrate that cultural self-expression, individualism and democracy languish in poor countries with colder-than-temperate winters, but flourish in rich countries with such winters. Mild summers are kind to this syndrome of culturally embedded democracy in rich countries only. Using these climato-economic niches of culture, we then estimate how unarrested global warming in conjunction with unaltered economic growth would affect democratic culture in 138 countries and regions. Local warming in concert with local economic trends would weaken democratic culture, especially the strongly democratic cultures of Australia, New Zealand, Northern Europe, and North America, but would strengthen democratic culture in China and Russia.

Author(s)
Richard Tol
Research Area(s)

Publication Details

Publisher

ESRI

Place of Publication

Dublin

Date of Publication

March 2, 2011

ESRI Series

ESRI Working Paper 378